Consolidated Global Minerals Consolidated Global Minerals: Rocky Mountain Riches by Tom Dyson The Rude Awakening Wall Street, New York Wednesday, August 3, 2005 Tom Dyson discusses a mining project being undertaken by Consolidated Global Minerals. ------------------------- The Rude Awakening PRESENTS: We focused our headlamps on the vein and moved closer to the rock face. Gold speckles were clearly visible to the naked eye... --- Advertisement ---
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------------------------- ROCKY MOUNTAIN RICHES By Tom Dyson Outside the mine, it felt like any other midsummer's day – hot and muggy. But down here, 500 feet deep in the bowels of a mountain they call Gold Hill, my fingers were slowly turning numb from the cold. "We're finding rock samples down here no one's seen since the 1890s," said Kory, the mine's resident mineral expert. "See this black spot here? It's a telluride deposit...40% gold, 40% silver and 20% tellurium." We focused our headlamps on the vein and moved closer to the rock face. Gold speckles were clearly visible to the naked eye... I'm in the hills above Boulder, Colorado to learn about gold mining. My hosts: Consolidated Global Minerals (TSXv: CTG), a junior exploration and development company with other properties in Tunisia, Canada and Nevada. They took me up to the project yesterday morning to meet the crew and tour the mine. Here's what I learned... Global's Front Range Property is made up of 106 consolidated claims containing 18 past producing mines. Not a single ounce of gold has been produced on the property since 1987 as the owners waited for higher gold prices, consolidated their ownership of the mountain and organized the required federal, state and county mining permits. Last year, the decision was made to reopen the mine for production. This week, the property will produce its first gold in 18 years. For the owners and workers on the hill, this will be a moment of great significance. Consolidated Global Minerals: A Big Rock Gold Hill is basically a big granite rock. At some point in its history, the rock shattered and the fissures that formed became infused with minerals. Miners call these fissures veins. You'll find dozens of different minerals in these veins, including deposits of silver, lead, nickel, copper and zinc. As the on-site geologist explained to me, due to its high gold and silver content, the most valuable mineral in these parts is called telluride. The principal adit – an adit is a horizontal cut as opposed to a shaft which is a vertical cut - extends about 850 feet into the mountain. There are several branches off this main shaft. They use dynamite to drive the shafts into the mountain. Each time a tunnel is extended, the geologist takes samples from the new rock face. He's looking for telluride veins... even better, the intersection of telluride veins. When he finds veins, he marks them with blue paint and moves on. One single vein intersection could provide enough gold to fund the entire project. Using hi-tech mining software, they plot the veins' paths and try to predict where they might intersect. This is the position Global currently find themselves in. The deposit has been mapped, they have a good idea where the veins intersect, and how much gold they hold, but the major digging is yet to begin. It's rare for a junior gold mine to have their own multi- million dollar gold recovery mill, but Global does. The mill will be operational this week, the mill's superintendent told me. Once the ore is broken out of the vein, they haul it up to the mill. This rock is run through two different crushers, sized, and then ground in a ball mill. Water is added and the solution is run through a contraption called a Knelson Concentrator, which uses centrifugal force to separate gold and telluride minerals from the waste rock. A gemini table is used to clean the concentrate. It's another form of density separation using running water and a shaking motion to rinse the rock from the gold and silver. I'm no expert in gold mining, geology, or even gold stock investing, and junior gold exploration companies like Global are risky investments. So I can only tell you what I saw, I can't make a recommendation. Besides, I'd never invest in only one junior gold mine, I'd have to buy a basket to spread the risk around. But for the record, I was extremely impressed by Global's operation. Sign Up for The Rude Awakening Start your mornings off with a dose of Rude news. The Rude Awakening is dedicated to highlighting phenomena in the financial markets that others may not see. Let the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times "break news." Sign up FREE Today! We will not share your email address with anyone else, period. -Andrew Palmer, Director E-commerce Marketing We Value Your Privacy |
1. Optimism exuded from everyone I spoke to. The confidence was genuine yet conservative. I got the impression these guys expect the mine to produce a great deal of gold... and to produce it at a considerable profit. 2. The workers on the hill aren't just wage monkeys, but lifetime mining enthusiasts. These guys really know their stuff... from the geologist who has a dedicated room in his house just for rock samples to the mill superintendent who knows the specific history of every piece of equipment under his roof. I don't think these guys would be working on the project if they didn't think it was viable. 3. Management pays attention to the environment. While I was there, an excavator was busy reclaiming land and the mine manager commented several times how important it is to Global that the site be kept clean, tidy and safe. If you'd like to tour the mine, and you don't mind traveling to Boulder, we have secured a personal invitation from the mine's manager specifically for readers of the Rude Awakening. Contact Matt Collins at bringit@direcway.com for an appointment. [Ed. Note: Tom Dyson is the kind of bloke who likes getting his hands dirty while investigating potential profit sources. Some of you may be completely enamored by the idea of stowing away in a cargo ship to uncover investment opportunities in far off lands, or spending the night in a boxcar, traveling through the Canadian countryside in search of the unknown company about to hit it big. If you are more inclined to sit back and let Mr. Dyson do all the freight train jumping, you may want to employ him as your 'man on the scene'. The Bull Hunter is a comprehensive newsletter in which Tom ventures where most stock analysts only read about second hand. He will be delivering information from the field right to your inbox with the kind of valuable strategic insight unattainable from behind a desk. Check out his website by visiting: www.bullhunternewsletter.com --- Advertisement ---
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------------------------- Did You Notice...? By Dan Denning Saudi King Fahd's death is the unofficial signal to Wall Street that summer vacation is over. Oil prices didn't react much to the news, perhaps because oil prices are already reflecting pervasive concern about the ability of tight global supply to meet growing global demand. In the TV interviews I did in New York last week, I was asked if it isn't already too late to buy oil and energy stocks. After all, when Exxon reports $88 billion in revenues and over $7 billion in net income...for the second quarter, how much better can it get? Who knows? In real terms, oil still isn't as expensive as it was at the peak of the oil shock in the 1970s. Neither do I buy the argument that speculative hedge fund money accounts for oil's extended stay at about $60. The near-month light sweet crude contract has moved from $47 to $60 without the support of speculative "hot money." The only thing that can change this macroeconomic dynamic is either the discovery of huge new oil supplies (unlikely) or a radical drop in demand. The drop in demand is the more probable of the two, yet it remains highly unlikely. And aside from the supply/demand dynamic, there are two other basic facts: First, increased oil exploration spending won't translate into new supply for years, assuming that exploration is successful. Second, the physical infrastructure of the oil transportation network (refineries) is already maxed out. Even if we could pump another 2 million barrels a day, we couldn't refine it. Refineries take time to build, too. Thus, altogether, the conditions for high oil prices are in place. Things can change quickly, of course. But nearly any geopolitical change, short of the second coming of Christ, looks oil and energy bullish to me. [Ed. Note: It wouldn't be as bad paying so much at the pump if you knew that money was trickling into you bank account at a greater rate. Dan shows you how to invest in oil so that the next time you fill your car up you'll be laughing at the exorbitant prices, not wincing: Strategic Options Alert ------------------------- And the Markets... | Tuesday | Monday | This week | Year-to-Date | DOW | 10,684 | 10,623 | 43 | -0.9% | S&P | 1,244 | 1,235 | 10 | 2.7% | NASDAQ | 2,218 | 2,195 | 33 | 2.0% | 10-year Treasury | 4.33% | 4.33% | 0.05 | 0.12 | 30-year Treasury | 4.54% | 4.53% | 0.06 | -0.28 | Russell 2000 | 689 | 683 | 9 | 5.7% | Gold | $432.15 | $432.60 | $2.65 | -1.2% | Silver | $7.24 | $7.28 | $0.02 | 6.3% | CRB | 317.57 | 314.60 | 5.57 | 11.8% | WTI NYMEX CRUDE | $61.89 | $61.57 | $1.32 | 42.4% | Yen (YEN/USD) | JPY 111.46 | JPY 111.37 | 0.98 | -8.7% | Dollar (USD/EUR) | $1.2194 | $1.2229 | -67 | 10.0% | Dollar (USD/GBP) | $1.7702 | $1.7733 | -126 | 7.7% |
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