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  1. 25 Posts.
    Hey all holders

    This had article even had a nice picture of K.R on the front.
    Businessnews Dan Wilkie 11-march-2014

    Alternative sources for funds

    Private equity funding, debt or vendor finance and contributions from high-net worth individuals have emerged as the only realistic options for junior mining and exploration firms struggling to win the interest of investors on the Australian Securities Exchange.

    Wolf Minerals managing director Russell Clark told Business News his company would not have achieved the progress it had on its $230 million Hemerdon tungsten and tin project in the UK without the backing of private equity funder Resource Capital Funds.

    Construction at the Hemerdon project is due to begin in June this year, while the project’s $222 million financing package – comprising a £75 million ($139 million) debt facility from a suite of European banks and a $US75 million bridge finance facility from RCF – was awarded deal of the year for 2013 by European Mining and Metals.

    “The company was financed with relatively few capital raisings,” Mr Clark said.

    “Tungsten is a commodity that’s not particularly well understood; the project we’ve got has been worked before so it’s not totally greenfields, and when off-takers and the project finance banks looked at it, they were happy that it met their criteria.

    “The other thing that was quite clever was that we took a bridging loan from RCF last June when there was still a lot of risk associated with the project.

    “At some point we will have to raise money, but the alternative would have been to do it in the middle of last year and dilute our existing shareholders.

    “Now we’ve got a much stronger project and a much stronger share price.”

    Another company that was unable to tap ASX investors for project finance was iron ore minnow FairStar Resources.

    Midway through 2013, FairStar managing director Kevin Robertson thought the company had signed a landmark deal that would put it on the path to production at its Steeple Hill iron ore deposit in the eastern Goldfields.

    The $260 million, 50:50 profit sharing joint venture arrangement with Alliance Super Holdings was cancelled last week, however, and will be replaced by a series of vendor finance arrangements with international infrastructure groups.

    Mr Robertson said a $US176 million rail infrastructure deal with Chinese state-owned CSR Ziyang was the first funding package announced for the project.

    “(Steeple Hill) is a more attractive proposition now because nobody is standing alone any more,” he said.

    “The parties that we are talking to now and the parties that are knocking on our door are from different backgrounds, and their feeling and their understanding is a lot more positive because nobody is taking the risk 100 per cent.

    “That’s why we split it, when we started talking to people about the financing and splitting it up, it became the preferred option, no doubt about it.

    “This strategy is definitely opening a lot more doors for us, particularly in the challenging debt and equity markets out there.”


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