A Diamond Play with Development, Discovery Potential

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Source: James Kwantes for Streetwise Reports 09/19/2017

With a diamond supply deficit looming, James Kwantes, editor of Resource Opportunities. profiles a cashed-up junior company at the forefront of Canadian diamond exploration.

The November 1991 discovery of diamonds in the Northwest Territories by prospectors Chuck Fipke and Stu Blusson put Canada on the global diamond map. It also triggered one of the largest staking rushes in the world, as hundreds of companies hurried north to find treasure.

A few years later, many had retreated to warmer climes. One company that remained in the hunt was Gren Thomas’s Aber Resources, with a large land package staked by Thomas and partners at Lac de Gras near the Fipke find. In the spring of 1994, an Aber exploration crew led by Thomas’s geologist daughter, Eira Thomas, raced the spring melt to drill through the ice in search of kimberlite—the rock that sometimes hosts valuable diamonds.

It was a long shot. Since the Fipke-Blusson discovery, the great Canadian diamond hunt had virtually ground to a halt—despite the millions of dollars spent in search of the glittery stones. But the drill core from Aber’s final spring hole had a two-carat diamond embedded in it. The Diavik discovery meant it was game on for Aber—and Canada’s nascent diamond industry.

DIAMOND POWER PLAYER

A quarter century after that fateful hole was punched through melting ice, Canada punches above its weight in the world of diamonds. Measured by value, the country is the third largest producer of diamonds by value globally. And the valuable diamonds that continue to be unearthed at the Diavik mine discovered by Aber are a big reason why.

The discovery unleashed a wave of shareholder value. The shares of Aber and its successor companies went from pennies to more than $50 as the quality of the diamonds and the asset became known. Aber is now known as Dominion Diamond Corp. (DDC:TSX; DDC:NYSE) and is Canada’s premier diamond company. Dominion operates the Ekati mine and owns 40% of Diavik. The Diavik mine is expected to produce about 7.4 million carats this year, making it among the world’s largest diamond operations.

Eira Thomas remains involved in the Canadian diamond world.

The team behind the Diavik discovery has also created a fair amount of shareholder value in the years since, led by Eira Thomas. She has co-founded two diamond players, Stornoway Diamond Corp. (SWY:TSX) and Lucara Diamond Corp. (LUC:TSX.V), and remains a director of the latter Lundin Group company. Her most recent gig, as CEO of Yukon-focused Kaminak Gold, ended rather well—producer Goldcorp Inc. (G:TSX; GG:NYSE) bought the company for $520 million last year.

Thomas is also an advisor to North Arrow Minerals Inc. (NAR:TSX.V), a cashed-up junior company at the forefront of Canadian diamond exploration. Aber’s Gren Thomas is North Arrow’s chairman and the CEO is Ken Armstrong, a former Aber and Rio Tinto geologist. North Arrow recently completed a mini-bulk sample and 11 drill holes at its advanced-stage Naujaat project in Nunavut, which hosts a population of valuable fancy orangey-yellow diamonds.

North Arrow Minerals has submitted 2,440 meters of kimberlite core for microdiamond analysis, as well as a 234 wet tonne mini-bulk sample. The mini-bulk sample should enable the company to get a better handle on overall diamond values and help define the population of more valuable colored diamonds.

The work program was funded by a $5-million financing of 25-cent units, with each unit consisting of one share and a full three-year warrant exercisable at 40 cents. Vancouver mining entrepreneur Ross Beaty and the Electrum Strategic Opportunities Fund, backed by billionaire Thomas Kaplan, each subscribed for $2 million.

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A cut and polished fancy orangey-yellow diamond from North Arrow’s Naujaat deposit.

In a space with few new discoveries or development projects, Canada is home to two of the world’s new diamond mines. Stornoway’s Renard mine in Quebec and Gahcho Kue, a De Beers-Mountain Province joint venture in the Northwest Territories, have both recently begun commercial production.

Globally, the diamond industry has faced headwinds, including India’s demonetization and choppy rough stone prices. But diamonds remain a key money maker for some of the world’s largest mining companies, including Rio Tinto Plc (RIO:NYSE; RIO:ASX; RIO:LSE; RTPPF:OTCPK) (60% owner of Diavik) and Anglo American Platinum Ltd. (AMS:JSE), which owns 85% of De Beers.

In a Bloomberg interview late last year, incoming Rio boss Jean-Sebastien Jacques identified diamonds as a “priority area”—”I would love to have more diamonds, to be very explicit.” The company recently backed up those words by signing a three-year, $18.5-million option on Shore Gold’s Star-Orion South diamond project in northern Saskatchewan.

And Anglo’s De Beers division remains a reliable profit generator. In 2016, rough diamond sales surged for both Anglo American (up 36%) and Russian producer Alrosa (up 26%), according to The Diamond Loupe. The Washington Group’s successful takeover bid for Dominion Diamond Corp. reflects the demand for well-run diamond mines, which are powerful profit machines.

EXPLORATION DEFICIT

On the exploration front, the picture is less promising. Budgets dried up during the mining slump that began in 2011, and little grassroots exploration work is being done. It’s particularly problematic for supply because diamond mines take longer to discover, evaluate and build. The new Canadian mines will help fill the gap, but it won’t be enough. Economic diamond discoveries have simply not kept pace with mine depletion, globally.

“There is definitely a lack of new projects, at least new projects that are close to infrastructure,” said Paul Zimnisky, an independent New York-based diamond analyst. “There really is not much at all in the global diamond production pipeline.”

Economic, world-class diamond projects are few and far between, and most exploration companies looking for them have failed, Zimnisky explained. That has resulted in wariness and declining interest among investors: “In general, shareholders have not done well in diamonds.”

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Argyle diamond mine, Australia

The looming supply deficit is particularly acute for rare colored diamonds, which fetch higher prices. Australia’s Ellendale mine produced an estimated 50% of the world’s fancy yellow diamonds in the years before it closed in 2015. The Argyle mine, also in Australia, is one of the world’s biggest mines and a source of valuable colored diamonds, including extremely rare pinks. It, too, is slated to close in the coming years, after decades of production.

North Arrow’s Naujaat could help fill the void. The project hosts a population of fancy orangey yellow diamonds that are more valuable because of their rarity. Naujaat is on tidewater, which dramatically reduces costs, and hosts a very large diamondiferous kimberlite, Q1-4, that outcrops on surface. The goal of the company’s program is to extend the Inferred resource to a depth of at least 300 meters below surface and better define the diamond population. The current resource at Naujaat is defined from surface to a depth of 205 meters. Three of the holes terminated in kimberlite, the deepest at a depth of 376 meters below surface.

“It’s the first drilling in more than 12 years,” observed North Arrow CEO Ken Armstrong. “The work will help us confirm and update the size of Q1-4 and improve our understanding of the deposit’s internal geology and diamond distribution.”

A new geological model of the largest kimberlite at Naujaat is expected next year, after further drilling in the spring, he said. The mini-bulk sample was shipped out on the annual sealift and is expected to arrive at the lab in Thunder Bay, Ontario, in early October.

In 2014 and 2015, North Arrow collected a small bulk sample at Naujaat (formerly known as Qilalugaq) with the goal of gauging diamond values. But the carat values on the small 384-carat package came in significantly below expectations. North Arrow shares were relegated to the market penalty box and the company has been largely under the radar since, despite important background work that set the stage for this year’s program.

RISK AND OPPORTUNITY

Contrarian investing and the ability to time cycles can lead to fortunes in the junior mining sector. Vancouver investor Ross Beaty has proven it, time and again. In the early 2000s, with copper trading for under US$1 a pound, his team assembled a portfolio of unwanted copper assets in a bear market. He developed and sold those projects during bull markets, turning $170 million in invested capital into shareholder returns of $1.87 billion. His latest win was a large bear-market investment in Kaminak Gold, later bought out by Goldcorp.

North Arrow Minerals is Beaty’s latest contrarian bet, participating in the financing with other investors including Electrum and company management and directors. In addition to the Naujaat program, exploration is also planned at North Arrow’s Mel, Loki and Pikoo projects.

North Arrow also has exposure to drilling through the LDG (Lac de Gras) joint venture with Dominion Diamond Corp. That project borders on the mineral leases where Diavik is located. Ekati is 40 kilometers to the northwest. Dominion plans to drill several targets there as part of a $2.8-million exploration program. North Arrow will have a 30% interest in the JV. In May, Dominion announced a “renewed strategic focus on exploration” and a $50-million, five-year exploration budget. Dominion’s new CEO, Patrick Evans, formerly ran Mountain Province Diamonds and has an exploration background.

A FANCY EDGE

North Arrow’s renewed focus on Naujaat comes after a polishing exercise yielded fancy yellow diamonds that turned some heads in the industry. Several were certified “fancy vivid” diamonds, a coveted designation in the colored diamond world. The quality of the polished stones suggests the fancy orangey yellow diamonds at Naujaat are considerably more valuable than the June 2015 valuation of the roughs indicated.

The primary conclusion of the diamond evaluators was that the 384-carat parcel of Naujaat diamonds was too small to properly evaluate. North Arrow’s 234 wet tonne sample should help remedy that. Lab results are expected in early 2018.

Another complicating factor at Naujaat is the presence of two distinct diamond populations of different ages, including a population of rare fancy yellow diamonds. It’s a consideration that was not factored into the prior carat valuation. It will be next time. Diamonds are a rarity play, and diamonds that occur less frequently—such as colored diamonds and large diamonds—are more valuable. Yellow diamonds made up only 9% of the 2015 Naujaat sample by stone count, but more than 21% by carat weight.

The drilling between 205 and 305 meters below surface confirmed or expanded previous interpretations of the overall kimberlite pipe geometry. The estimated surface area of the kimberlite at 305 meters below surface is at least 5 hectares, compared to 12 hectares at surface. The kimberlite body remains completely open at depth. This summer’s drilling should help North Arrow better evaluate the contours of the diamond deposit on the path to a future Preliminary Economic Assessment. The Q1-4 kimberlite has a horseshoe shape that makes it amenable to open-pit mining and a low strip ratio. A larger bulk sample is planned for 2018.

COLORED CARATS

Fancy yellow diamonds were thrust into the spotlight recently when Dominion unveiled the striking 30.54-carat Arctic Sun, a fancy vivid yellow diamond cut from a 65.93-carat stone unearthed at Ekati. Dominion also played up colored diamonds in its latest corporate presentation—specifically, the sweetener effect of high-value fancy yellow and orange diamonds at Misery.

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The potential emergence of Canadian colored diamonds could help solidify Canada’s position on the world diamond stage, according to analyst Zimnisky. On the branding and marketing side, Canadian diamonds continue to have strong appeal because of their high quality and ethical sourcing.

And the two recent Canadian mine openings are a bright spot for the global industry, despite early growing pains at both Gahcho Kue (lower-than-expected values) and Renard (breakage), he pointed out.

“There is absolutely an opportunity to sell Canadian diamonds at a premium, especially in North America,” Zimnisky said. The United States remains the world’s largest diamond market, despite the growth in demand from China and India.

Important hurdles remain before any mine is built at Naujaat, but the strength of North Arrow’s management team bodes well for success, according to Zimnisky.

“North Arrow is looking for something world-class and it’s high-risk, high-reward,” said Zimnisky, who has seen the company’s cut and polished fancy yellow diamonds: “They’re beautiful.”

The appetite for fancy yellow and other colored diamonds remains strong, despite the closure or pending closure of two of the mines that produce many of them. Last year a De Beers store opened on Madison Avenue in New York, Zimnisky said, and the feature diamond on opening day was a diamond necklace with a very large fancy yellow stone of more than 100 carats.

DISCOVERY POTENTIAL

Further north of Naujaat on Nunavut’s Melville Peninsula is another North Arrow project with a good shot at a kimberlite discovery. At the Mel property, 210 kilometers north of Naujaat, North Arrow geologists have narrowed down and defined three kimberlite indicator mineral (KIM) trains through systematic soil sampling over several seasons. Last year’s till sampling defined where the KIM train is cut off, suggesting the bedrock kimberlite source is nearby.

The discovery of a new kimberlite field this season is possible, since kimberlites in the region outcrop at surface. “It’s a first look, but there’s potential for discovery without drilling,” says CEO Ken Armstrong.

As for the Lac de Gras joint venture, the US$1.1-billion hostile takeover bid for Dominion unveiled by the private Washington Corp. earlier this year may work in North Arrow’s favor. In addition to spurring a stock surge, the bid forced the diamond miner to crystallize its focus on creating shareholder value. And a key strategy for Dominion, with its two aging mines, is a renewed exploration push.

Finding new diamondiferous kimberlites in proximity to its existing operations would be a big boost for Dominion. One of its best shots is through the joint venture with North Arrow, which covers 147,200 hectares south of Ekati and Diavik. Dominion is spending $2.8 million on the project this season, including a planned drill program. North Arrow is well-positioned to capture the value of any Dominion kimberlite discoveries made.

North Arrow plans to conduct till sampling in the fall at Pikoo, its Saskatchewan diamond discovery, in advance of a potential early 2018 drill program.

James Kwantes is the editor of Resource Opportunities, a subscriber supported junior mining investment publication. Kwantes has two decades of journalism experience and was the mining reporter at Vancouver Sun, the city’s paper of record.

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Disclosure:
1) James Kwantes owns shares of North Arrow Minerals. North Arrow is one of three company sponsors of Resource Opportunities, helping keep subscription prices low for the subscriber-supported newsletter. North Arrow Minerals is a high-risk junior exploration company. This article is for informational purposes only and all investors need to do their own research and due diligence.
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)