Excellon CEO talks Mexican tax reform and strategy – by Anthony Vaccaro (Northern Miner – March 21, 2014)

The Northern Miner, first published in 1915, during the Cobalt Silver Rush, is considered Canada’s leading authority on the mining industry.

Excellon Resources’ (TSX: EXN) La Platosa Mine in Durango is one of the world’s highest grade silver mines. The mine also boasts lead and zinc byproducts that help make it one of the lowest cash cost silver mines in Mexico.

The company’s CEO, Brendan Cahill, took some time to sit down with The Northern Miner at the recent Prospectors & Developers Association of Canada (PDAC) convention in Toronto to discuss recent changes to Mexico’s tax code and Excellon’s strategy for thriving in a low cost commodity environment.

The Northern Miner: Your company, like other producers in Mexico such as Sierra Metals (TSX: SMT), took a more expedited route towards production, eschewing the formalities of completing a bankable feasibility study. Is there something about Mexico that allows companies to fast-track to production?

Brendan Cahill: With all the talk of tax reform, when you go through the checklist of things a company is looking for in a country it is going to invest in — the geology, the security, the community relations, education, stability of government — it is still better than almost anywhere else in the world for building a mine.

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Investors worried about Ukraine miss the real problem: China – by Eric Reguly (Globe and Mail – March 22, 2014)

The Globe and Mail is Canada’s national newspaper with the second largest broadsheet circulation in the country. It has enormous influence on Canada’s political and business elite.

Rome — What’s scarier if you are an investor with an over-the-horizon view: The Ukraine crisis or the economic slowdown in China?

Blinded by the media glare, you would probably pick the Ukraine crisis, which began last month with the ousting of the country’s corrupt, pro-Moscow president and may have reached its climax this week with Russia’s annexation of Crimea – Vladimir Putin’s Anschluss moment.

But maybe the climax has yet to come. Investors in North America and the European Union are duly worried that the sanctions designed to punish Mr. Putin and his cronies will evolve into full-blown trade, investment and banking sanctions that would severely damage the Russian economy, the world’s eighth largest. Broad, punitive sanctions could in turn trigger retaliatory sanctions that could damage the fragile EU economy (less so the U.S. economy).

We got a hint of the possible mess to come on Friday, when Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev threatened to raise the price that Ukraine pays for natural gas and sue the country for $11-billion (U.S.) in arrears to Gazprom, the Russian state gas exporter.

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Going deep underground in Canada in search of dark matter – by Ivan Semeniuk (Globe and Mail – March 22, 2014)

The Globe and Mail is Canada’s national newspaper with the second largest broadsheet circulation in the country. It has enormous influence on Canada’s political and business elite.

SUDBURY, Ont. — The deeper you go, the higher you fly. The Beatles lyric seems apt while I’m plunging down a mine shaft at 10 metres a second. My ears pop as the open-air elevator descends and the bare rock walls rush past in a blur.

After three minutes we’re two kilometres below ground, and the elevator stops. We’ve finally reached the level of SNOLAB. Located near Sudbury, Ont., it’s one of the world’s deepest laboratories and a place where scientists are hoping to answer a riddle of cosmic proportions: What is dark matter?

Unseen but ever present, dark matter makes up 85 per cent of all the stuff in the universe. Like an invisible conductor, its gravity guides the motions of galaxies and stars. When the universe began, dark matter helped to shepherd atoms together, ultimately making it possible for planets to form and life to emerge. Until we understand dark matter, we won’t really understand why we exist.

Like the Higgs boson, which was confirmed last year, or the gravitational echoes from the Big Bang reported earlier this week, the detection of dark matter would be a Nobel Prize-worthy find – one that would offer a genuinely new piece of information about the nature of reality.

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Crowdfunding: the new penny stock – Editorial (Globe and Mail – March 21, 2014)

The Globe and Mail is Canada’s national newspaper with the second largest broadsheet circulation in the country. It has enormous influence on Canada’s political and business elite.

Canada’s securities regulators are opening up an entirely new route for small companies to raise money using the Internet. The cautious new regime unveiled on Thursday will allow companies for the first time to raise capital and issue shares through crowdfunding websites, but under a slew of restrictive conditions aimed at trying to prevent crowdfunding from becoming the new stock-fraud vehicle of choice.

Crowdfunding has become a surprisingly popular option for individuals and small companies to raise tiny donations – as little as $1 each – from thousands of people over the Internet, to finance projects such as documentary films or the development of new technologies. Until now, all such financing in Canada has been in the form of a donation, sometimes in exchange for a small gift of a company’s product, because companies are barred from issuing shares to give investors an ownership stake in the firm, except under narrow conditions outlined by provincial securities commissions.

Those conditions are about to be broadened considerably. On Thursday, most of Canada’s provincial securities commissions said they will proceed with new rules – with variations in details among the provinces – to allow crowdfunding of equity offerings under limited conditions.

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HudBay playing long game in bid for Augusta – by Rachelle Younglai (Globe and Mail – March 21, 2014)

The Globe and Mail is Canada’s national newspaper with the second largest broadsheet circulation in the country. It has enormous influence on Canada’s political and business elite.

HudBay Minerals Inc.’s strategy to buy a reluctant Augusta Resource Corp. is likely quite simple and will not require a higher bid.

The Toronto-based mining company recently extended its hostile offer for Augusta and waived its minimum tender condition. It is a risky plan for HudBay, which already owns 16 per cent of Augusta. The company could fail in its bid to acquire the miner and be stuck with a much larger chunk of Augusta that it would have trouble selling if it so desired. But the strategy has worked for HudBay’s chief executive officer in the past.

“We are not running an emotional roller-coaster here. We have a game plan and I think it’s well executed up to this point,” HudBay’s CEO David Garofalo said in an interview.

Mr. Garofalo would not say whether he would continue to extend HudBay’s offer or sweeten the bid for Augusta, which is developing a large copper mine in Arizona. However, a look at one of his past deals sheds light on how HudBay plans to wear Augusta down.

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Mining companies show increased confidence in British Columnbia – by Alana Wilson (Troy Media – March 20, 2014)

http://www.troymedia.com/

But there’s still plenty of room for improvement

Alana Wilson is a senior economist with the Fraser Institute and co-author of the Survey of Mining Companies 2013.

VANCOUVER, BC, Mar 20, 2014/ Troy Media/ – British Columbia was once regarded by miners as hostile to investment and ranked last in Canada for the attractiveness of its mining policy environment. However the tide has turned in recent years and British Columbia has again improved its ratings for global mining investment.

Bringing a mine from discovery to production is a long, expensive and time-consuming process with thousands of mineral prospects explored for each new mine eventually developed. For this reason, mining companies seek out stable, predictable, and transparent policy environments for mining investment. Results from the recent Fraser Institute Annual Survey of Mining Companies suggest that the province is becoming more attractive to mining investment with miners rating the province higher for a fifth consecutive year. However, despite this vote of confidence, B.C. could go further and become a global leader in mining.

The mining survey is based on the opinions of mining executives and assesses the effects of different public policy factors on attracting or dissuading investment. British Columbia has been included in the survey since its inception in 1997, where British Columbia ranked last of Canadian mining jurisdictions assessed.

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Osisko says $4.4-billion Canadian Malartic mine plan proves Goldcorp’s bid is far too low – by Peter Koven (National Post – March 21, 2014)

The National Post is Canada’s second largest national paper.

TORONTO – As Sean Roosen sees it, Canadian Malartic is the second most valuable gold mine fully owned by a North American producer.

The chief executive of Osisko Mining Corp. said Thursday that his shares should be worth $10 to $12 each on the value of this asset alone, or as much as 58% above the current level. He spent all day in Toronto to try to get that point across to shareholders and convince them not to tender to Goldcorp Inc.’s hostile bid.

“There’s a lot of value left on the table here that we’ve been able to highlight,” he said in an interview. Mr. Roosen’s claims are based on Osisko’s updated mine plan for Canadian Malartic, which it released on Thursday. Based on that plan, Osisko estimates that the Quebec-based mine has a net present value of about $3.1-billion. And after accounting for the relative trading multiples of other gold miners, the company figures it should be valued at about $4.4-billion.

That is far above the $2.9-billion in cash and stock that Goldcorp currently has on the table. Goldcorp will almost certainly boost its offer in the weeks ahead, so the pressure is on Mr. Roosen to show this transaction is a bad idea.

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Transparency is vital to relationship between oil industry and aboriginals – by Claudia Cattaneo (National Post – March 21, 2014)

The National Post is Canada’s second largest national paper.

Calgary – As Canada’s aboriginals play a larger role in the development of Canada’s natural resources, the federal government is taking steps to boost the transparency of the payments they receive from developers.

But the move, which would force annual disclosure of payments worth $100,000 or more, is drawing push-back from those affected the most — aboriginals and the oil industry.

Yet greater transparency would promote better practices, increased accountability, set ground rules and inform the public debate around the impacts of resource extraction on Canada’s aboriginal people. The proposal is part of an international effort to put a spotlight on payments made by extractive industries to governments.

But Ottawa’s proposal goes farther. It would require payments made by oil and gas and mining companies to all levels of governments, including aboriginal communities, domestically and abroad, to be disclosed, preferably through public filings to provincial securities regulators.

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Greg Rickford could bring more collegial approach to Natural Resources portfolio – by Bruce Cheadle (Canadian Press – March 19, 2014)

 http://www.680news.com/

OTTAWA – The arc of Greg Rickford’s career isn’t the norm but should give him an interesting perspective on his latest professional challenge.

From nurse to lawyer to MBA to member of Parliament, and now the new federal Natural Resources minister, Rickford, 46, has spent a lot of time dealing with First Nations issues in Ontario’s rugged and remote northwest.

Since last July, he’s been immersed in helping shepherd a massive northern Ontario mining development proposal through the federal-provincial funding labyrinth — a file fraught with political one-upmanship that Rickford has mostly avoided.

So when Prime Minister Stephen Harper tapped the Kenora, Ont., MP on Wednesday to replace Joe Oliver, the newly promoted finance minister, even the Conservative government’s critics were ready to cut him some slack.

Those who know Rickford say he’ll bring a collegial, level-headed approach to some of the biggest economic files on the Harper government’s plate. “He’s a practical, smart and down-to-earth guy,” said Geoff Norquay, a former senior aide to Harper who knows Rickford well.

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Tricky talks await new Natural Resources Minister Greg Rickford – by Shawn McCarthy (Globe and Mail – March 20, 2014)

The Globe and Mail is Canada’s national newspaper with the second largest broadsheet circulation in the country. It has enormous influence on Canada’s political and business elite.

OTTAWA — Greg Rickford will need to call on all his experience working with First Nations to resolve some of the toughest roadblocks in the Conservative government’s plan for energy and mining development.

The 46-year-old MP from Kenora, Ont., was appointed by Prime Minister Stephen Harper on Wednesday to replace Joe Oliver as Natural Resources Minister. Awaiting him are brewing resource battles in British Columbia and Ontario that are both economically important and fraught with political risks for the government heading into the next election.

In both cases, the government’s relationship with aboriginal communities and its willingness to help finance their development are key.

Mr. Rickford came into politics promising to try to improve the economy and infrastructure of First Nations. Early in his career, he worked as a nurse and a lawyer in remote communities in northwestern Ontario. Running for election in 2008, one of his central campaign promises was about the need to improve conditions for aboriginal Canadians.

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Can Natural Resources Minister Greg Rickford transform Canada into an ‘energy superpower’? – by Peter Koven and Jeff Lewis (National Post – March 20, 2014)

The National Post is Canada’s second largest national paper.

TORONTO/CALGARY – Greg Rickford knows mining, and he knows how to work with First Nations communities. Now he has to prove he can manoeuvre Canada through the rough-and-tumble world of pipeline politics.

Mr. Rickford, 46, was named the new federal natural resources minister on Wednesday as Joe Oliver moved on to finance. He inherits a grand plan to transform Canada into an “energy superpower” with $650-billion in resource development over the next decade.

The appointment was praised across Ontario’s mining sector, where Mr. Rickford is widely respected and is already at the centre of the province’s biggest new resource development. But it elicited shrugs in the West, where the Kenora native is a virtual unknown.

“Now is a critical time for Canada’s natural resource sector, and [Mr. Rickford] will need to get up to speed quickly on a number of files,” said David Collyer, president of the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers.

Among the plans championed by Ottawa are accelerated extraction of Alberta’s oil sands and liquefied natural gas exports on the West Coast. Then there are the contentious pipeline issues:

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New finance minister Joe Oliver could boost push for national regulator – by Lisa Wright (Toronto Star – March 20, 2014)

The Toronto Star has the largest circulation in Canada. The paper has an enormous impact on federal and Ontario politics as well as shaping public opinion.

Markets should react well to ‘serious guy’. Joe Oliver’s move into the finance minister’s seat could boost federal hopes of establishing a national securities regulator.

“He knows all the players, the banks, the regulators. He would have, certainly, contacts where he can sit down and have a conversation,” said Thomas Caldwell, chief executive of Caldwell Securities Ltd. in Toronto, who has known Oliver for 40 years.

Outgoing finance minister Jim Flaherty had long pushed for a national regulator; Canada is the only major industrialized country without one. Oliver, who was named to the new post Wednesday, has worked as an investment banker with Merrill Lynch and is a former executive director of the Ontario Securities Commission.

The 73-year-old Harvard MBA is also former president of the Investment Dealers Association of Canada, and played a prominent role as chair of the advisory committee of the International Council of Securities Associations, and as chair of the consultative committee of the International Association of Securities Commissions.

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Soaring energy prices making Ontario look dim for manufacturers – by Adam Radwanski (Globe and Mail – March 19, 2014)

The Globe and Mail is Canada’s national newspaper with the second largest broadsheet circulation in the country. It has enormous influence on Canada’s political and business elite.

For businesses in Brockville, the attempt to lure them over the border wasn’t new. But the pitch was. Earlier this winter, manufacturers in the Eastern Ontario community received a letter reminding them that their province’s industrial electricity rates were projected to rise by 33 per cent over the next five years, and 55 per cent by 2032.

“As a hedge against these increases,” it suggested, “setting up an operation just across the border in St. Lawrence County, New York, may be a competitive strategy you should consider.”

Such overtures, if not in written form then made more casually, are becoming increasingly common in Ontario. While they may not find immediate takers, they are emblematic of the mounting economic threat from an energy-cost trajectory that – following a series of questionable policy decisions – the province now seems powerless to do much about.

Owing mostly to a combination of overdue investments in infrastructure, phasing out coal and an ill-fated gamble on green energy, soaring power rates have already greatly increased the cost of doing business in Ontario.

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Nickel prices affected in wake of Ukraine-Russia crisis – by (CBC News Sudbury – March 18, 2014)

http://www.cbc.ca/sudbury/

A recent upswing in nickel prices is being attributed to Russian President Vladimir Putin’s policies towards Ukraine — and the threat of international sanctions against the Putin regime could have big ramifications for the commodity.

Monday’s sanctions by Canada and the United States were mostly aimed at individuals, but some observers suspect Russia’s nickel exporters, and other industries, will be next on the list.

Sudbury representatives for nickel mining companies like Vale declined a request for comment, but analyst Donald Rumball, a Toronto-based analyst who studies the Sudbury mining market, said the price fluctuation probably won’t last.

“Well, the problem with sanctions is very porous,” he said. “If Russia was stopped from selling nickel, what would stop it from selling to China and Indonesia and Vietnam and who else.”

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$3B potash mine possible for Sedley – by Bruce Johnstone (Regina Leader-Post – March 19, 2014)

http://www.leaderpost.com/index.html

Rio Tinto partners with North Atlantic

A brief mention of a joint venture project with North Atlantic Potash Inc. in Rio Tinto’s 2013 annual report has the potash industry buzzing about a large find of potash near Sedley, about 30 kilometres southeast of Regina.

As it turns out, Saskatoon-based North Atlantic internally announced the discovery of 329 million tonnes of potash on its website in December, but never released the information to the public, according to a North Atlantic employee.

In the annual report, Rio reported that the Sedley area discovery contained “encouraging potash grade and thickness,’ according to an article earlier this week in The Australian, the country’s largest national newspaper.

The joint venture between Rio Tinto Potash Management, a subsidiary of Rio Tinto, one of the largest mining companies in the world, and North Atlantic Potash, a subsidiary of JCS Acron, one of Russia’s largest mining companies, was formed in 2011.

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