Canada gold assets regaining lost luster, helped by soft C$
posted on
Mar 06, 2015 12:50PM
Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Mexico - Yamana is targeting sustainable gold production of 2.2 M oz of gold by 2012.
 Thomson Reuters
 By Euan Rocha and Susan Taylor
 TORONTO, March 5 (Reuters) - Canadian gold projects once
 shunned by miners in favor of more alluring opportunities
 overseas are regaining their sheen, as a weaker currency, new
 tax breaks and greater security of tenure are wooing miners to
 return home.
 In the gold rush during the last decade, Canadian miners had
 largely focused on projects in far flung countries that often
 offered much larger potential output than what was available at
 home.
 But a rash of windfall gains taxes, political turmoil and
 even outright expropriation have caused those miners to rethink
 their strategies.
 "Canada is, for all intents and purposes, one of the best
 places you can explore," said Ian Ball, president of Abitibi
 Royalties Inc. "It had fallen out of favor a bit, but it
 is coming back quite rapidly."
 At this week's Prospectors and Developers Association of
 Canada convention, the world's largest mining gathering, the
 mood was somber. Many junior mining companies ravaged by the
 downturn in metal prices have struggled to raise financing, or
 attract the interest of larger rivals.
 But that trend is beginning to turn for some of those with
 gold projects in Canada.
 "We have noticed that mining companies are really, really
 looking at Canadian projects," said Richard Boulay, a director
 with Moneta Porcupine Mines Inc. He said Moneta, which
 owns gold projects near Timmins, Ontario, had been approached by
 five major miners at the convention seeking details on its
 assets.
 These Canadian mines generally do not hold the promise mega
 projects like Barrick Gold Corp's Pascua Lama asset in
 South America and Kinross Gold Corp's Tasiast mine in
 Africa. But bets like those soured badly and resulted in
 billions in write-offs.
 Miners are now keen on smaller assets in safer jurisdictions
 that cost less and are faster to build.
 And even though project permitting can be arduous in Canada,
 much of the recent takeover activity in the sector has centered
 around Canadian gold assets.
 In January, Canada's Goldcorp Inc agreed to buy Probe
 Mines Ltd in an all-stock deal that valued the owner of
 the Borden Gold project in Ontario at C$526 million ($421
 million).
 Late last year, Osisko Gold Royalties Ltd agreed to
 buy smaller rival Virginia Mines for C$479 million, winning
 control of royalty interests in two major Quebec mines.
 Those deals came less than a year after Yamana Gold Inc
  and Agnico Eagle Mines Ltd bought Osisko's
 Canadian Malartic gold mine in the province of Quebec and other
 assets in the area for C$3.9 billion.
 "Investors have yet to catch up with the corporates who see
 value in these assets. In time, that trend is likely to change,
 as it has in previous cycles," said James Wilson, mining analyst
 for Morgans Financial in Perth.
 He sees a similar trend eventually playing out in Australia
 as well, as a weaker Aussie dollar pushes miners take a closer
 look at gold assets there.
 CANADIAN ATTRACTION
 Of 13 major equity financing deals announced by Canadian
 mining companies this year, 12 were focused on funding gold
 assets. And eight of those were specifically to fund work tied
 to Canadian gold projects, an indication of where investors see
 value.
 "Everything is happening in Canada. One because it is a safe
 jurisdiction and two because of a much weaker Canadian dollar,"
 said Abitibi's Ball.
 While gold is traded in U.S. dollars and has stayed
 in the $1,150 to $1,350 an ounce range in the last year, costs
 for Canadian gold miners are largely denominated in local
 currency, which has weakened to about 80 U.S. cents.
 Agnico Eagle, which produces some two-thirds of its gold in
 Canada, recently estimated that local currency declines could
 reduce its U.S. dollar-denominated cash production costs by 5 to
 6 percent.
 Canada, home to the majority of the world's publicly-traded
 mining companies, is also putting in place incentives that give
 exploration companies and investors tax credits for early stage
 permitting and community consultation.
 Ball says the tax credits will help.
 "Canada is experiencing a resurgence in gold, it is a cycle
 and we may well fall out of favor again, but right now Canada is
 coming back."
 ($1 = 1.2499 Canadian dollars)