Comment by
uudamann on Dec 11, 2020 3:02pm
In the second year AUN will be obligated to repay close 1/3 of the loan, when pricipal and interest payments kick in. That leaves very little margin if things do not go smoothly. Mercuria has no real collateral if the mine restart fails. Seems like Russian roulette for both parties or a variation of the circular firing squad with bone crushing interest rates the ammunition.
Comment by
twpt on Dec 13, 2020 1:04pm
Want the loan gone? Easily done by PP. The reason it was done by loan instead of PP is so the can keep SP up while going into production. SP will rise likely to 2.00 by mid 2021 when production starts. If it all goes smoothly they will then have to make a choice, either do a pp and pay loan off or resart Shafter. Either way we win
Comment by
marshalljj on Jan 01, 2021 10:02pm
"If the Revenue mine begins operating in 2021, the first time in 120 years, they will discover the narrow veins have highly variable silver concentrations and are discontinuous." - Are you saying this is good or bad?
Comment by
TechOne on Jan 02, 2021 7:39pm
He is saying that it is 'bad' .. Personally, for now I will let the company do it's job and bring the mine to production.. Either we make it or financing terms are such that we lose the whole shabang.. For now, for what it is worth, I think we should make it.. We have six months to find out..