Archive for the 'Diamond' Category

A forecast: Canada’s Venture Exchange

Greetings investors!

I’ve been analyzing the one year chart for Canada’s TSX Venture Exchange. The CDNX index is mineral weighted, comprised of all the junior penny stocks which trade on the Toronto Stock Exchange. So it’s a good barometer of where stock prices are headed in the short and medium term.

What I don’t like about the chart is the  slow stochastic indicator which is currently overbullish, having pushed well past the 80 point mark. In fact it seems to have peaked and tipped downward in recent sessions. Also, we’ve had positive divergence of the MACD for at least three weeks now, and that looks like it will head south shortly.

On the plus side, the RSI, or relative strength index indicator, is well short of 70 and still climbing, so we could see the index travel further. I think over the short term we could see a minor correction but the uptrend is well established so any dip is destined to be short and sharp. The medium term outlook is quite rosy.

Will the CDNX reach its historic highs of +3300? I think it will over the longer term. Despite galloping commodities prices over the past 60 days, particularly in gold and zinc and lead, we haven’t seen a commensurate rise in the share prices of exploration juniors. I believe that is still to come. I think there are a couple of reasons for it, or maybe just one: The market has yet to see any results from all the drilling to get excited over. Agreed, there are lots of great projects and smaller mines coming on stream, but we haven’t seen anything in the order of a Voisey’s Bay (nickel, copper, cobalt), or an Ekati (diamonds).

Moreover, I’ve noticed one important difference from past mineral bull markets: We haven’t seen the characteristic eye-popping share valuations for juniors with big discoveries, where the stock price travels from mere pennies to $50 or $75 or $125 per share. I think one reason for that is merely the different way entrepreneurs are organizing their share structures. Rather than let their prices travel endlessly upward, companies that have added substantial value to their portfolios in recent times are creating more paper. This results in a larger market capitalization without creating high stock prices.

I think that’s a good thing, since it discourages selling. Also, I’ve noticed a lot of share giveaways, splits whereby newly created stock given away as a dividend to the shareholder base. This is often done when a company spins off its non core assets into another vehicle and ‘gives away’ the shares to its existing investors. Again, a good thing, since it keeps shareholders in the deal and even gives them another equity to invest in.

Without a big discovery and/or upwardly mobile share prices, we’re not likely to see the sort of investor hysteria of past bull markets. This is probably a good thing, since it ensures a more orderly market without those traumatizing and gut wrenching ups and downs of portfolio values.

The message to investors in this market is very clear: Go the distance, and don’t be in a hurry to sell.

Makes sense to me!

Kb

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The BarkerLetter on September 27th 2007 in Commodity investing, Copper, Diamond, Gold, Nickel, Zinc

Will diamonds outshine gold?

Greetings investors!

I haven’t posted since April, when I decided to take a time out pending the inevitable correction in world markets. Not that we’re in the process of that, I’ve renewed my interest in the mineral stocks. I think we’re in for a sustained period of growth.

I’m particularly excited about diamonds. The forecast to 2015 of a 3% annual rise in diamond demand has not changed, and as no important new discoveries have been announced, a substantial supply shortfall is predicted within five or six years.

Friends of this newsletter know I’ve been following Canada’s expanding diamond play since its inception in the early 90s. I’m still optimistic that a number of new mines will be found and exploited in the Northwest Territories over the coming years.

One of my favorite projects is the former Tli Kwi Cho pipe, the DO-27, which has been subjected to on-again, off-again exploration for some 15 years.

I like projects that have an exploration history because as exploration technologies evolve, they stand a greater chance of being rendered profitable. Moreover, having a warehouse of historical drilling data is very comforting for the investor. The DO-27 is a also located within hailing distance of BHP Billiton’s multi billion dollar Ekati pipe cluster, which is another good thing.

In fact we had some news from DO-27 project recently when Peregrine Diamonds (PGD.TSX-V) finally released the grades from last summer’s bulk sampling program.

The results were mixed in my view, but largely positive.

The company hoped for a total yield of + 3,000 carats but actually got 1,724.57 carats; that doesn’t qualify as ‘barnburning’ results, though it’s not bad either. The good news is they confirmed the grade there at 0.89 carats per tonne, and snagged a handful of fancy yellow gems as well.

The average weight per stone was rather small at 0.094 carats. However, some are of exceptional value, including a 4.35 carat fancy yellow gem, the first to be recovered there. The twenty largest diamonds in the package range from +2 to +9 carats each, and 12 of those are gem quality.

Grade can be deceiving in terms of the economics of a diamond project. It is quite possible for a mine to be profitable not from the average value of its stones, but the extremely high quality of a mere handful of them. However, finding those is more luck than science, which doesn’t make much of a case for the stock.

In any case we’re still a long way from an economic appraisal of the DO-27 project, although the signs are encouraging. Previous bulk sample estimates there have ranged from 0.90 carats per tonne in 2005 to 0.88 carats per tonne in 2006. That continuity of grade there is grounds for going the distance. Moreover, there was a follow up surprise some days after the initial press release when PGD confirmed that newly discovered kimberlites located below the main diamond bearing unit of the northeast lobe are diamondiferous.

That is good news indeed, since it suggests the potential money pit has the potential for an extension. The area below 204 meters was thought to be mostly granite.

With it’s stock price still under $2 per share, Peregrine is one of the most exciting exploration plays for the money in my view. Diamonds are a great story: they are always in demand, and their pricing doesn’t follow the gut wrenching ups and downs of other commodities such as gold. It’s true that the story tends to fade from view during times of high mineral prices, but the discovery of an economic diamond mine is big news in any kind of market.

Moreover, I think somebody, (hopefully Peregrine!), is going to discover something big, and soon. You can’t have the drills turning as long as they have without bumping into something exciting. The rising tide will lift all boats.

An even better value than Peregrine is Dentonia Resources (DTA.TSX-V), which has a percentage of the DO-27 but still trades under a dime. We didn’t see a significant rise in the share prices of either company, which means the story is still bubbling beneath the surface. I’m looking for a gradual rise over the coming months as the results of additional work are released.

Dentonia qualifies as a buy under my top down investment system: the right commodity, the right place (Canada’s NWT has arguably the best gems in the world, plus the DO-27 is spitting distance from a world class producer, the Ekati), and mostly, the right price.

- Kevin Barker

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The BarkerLetter on September 25th 2007 in Commodity investing, Diamond

GGL Diamond gets a lucky nickel find

GGL Diamond Corp. (GGL>TSXV) had a stellar run yesterday on early results from its Winter Lake properties in Canada’s Northwest Territories.

The diamond explorer announced it had found nickel there, with host geology similar to the famed Voisey’s Bay discovery made in the country’s easternmost Newfoundland province in the 1990s.

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The BarkerLetter on April 5th 2007 in Commodity investing, Diamond

April a good month for diamonds!

I’m watching Peregrine Diamonds (PGD.TSX) heading into the new month.

At least one rating (Westwind Partners) on Peregrine has been raised to buy from hold in recent weeks on what is deemed the early success of PGD’s bulk sample program at DO-27 in Canada’s Northwest Territories.

We’ve been told the program is well underway, with 1,000 metric tons collected from the DO-27 kimberlite so far. The ice-based drilling is proceeding without the technical challenges it experienced last year.

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admin on March 30th 2007 in Commodity investing, Diamond

Is SouthernEra Diamonds Inc pondering friendly takeover?

Shares of Canadian diamond explorer SouthernEra Diamonds (SDM.TSX) spiked over 40% on Friday on news of a potential stock swap with Mwana Africa plc.

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admin on March 16th 2007 in Commodity investing, Diamond

Diamond Fields hitting high grades in Namibia

Here’s a story the market missed. Diamond Fields International Ltd. (DFI:TSX) announced an average sales price of US$258 per carat for stones produced from offshore mining in the Diaz Prospect, Namibia.

The average was obtained from a parcel which included a 1.78ct fancy pink diamond which fetched US$25,888, based on a per carat valuation of US$14,544. Diamond Fields says that’s the highest per carat price ever received for an individual rough stone.

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admin on March 15th 2007 in Commodity investing, Diamond

Staking rush brewing in Canada’s far north

These new overtures towards Wolfden Resources (WLF.T) by Australian zinc miner Zinifex intrigue me.

Zinifex, an US$8 billion company with diminishing inventories of zinc and lead, has initiated a friendly takeover bid for Wolfden in the hopes of getting the company’s assets in the vast Canadian territory of Nunavut.

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admin on February 21st 2007 in Commodity investing, Diamond