Canada’s Cornerstone Capital Resources (TSX-V: CGP) said on Wednesday it was to planning to call a meeting of SolGold’s (LON, TSX:SOLG) shareholders to replace the company’s entire board.
The move by the Ontario-based junior, which has an 8% interest in SolGold, comes after it rejected the Ecuador-focused gold miner’s second takeover approach on Tuesday.
SolGold, the owner of the massive Cascabel copper-gold project in Ecuador that has attracted big miners, made an all-stock offer for Cornerstone late in June.
That bid, which valued Cornerstone at about C$140 million ($102m), would have seen the bidder pay C$3.90 for each of the target company’s shares. That was a 22% premium to its closing price on June 29, the day before SolGold presented the offer.
This is not the first time SolGold has made an effort to take over Cornerstone. It previously tried in both 2017 and 2018, following up last year with the first disclosed attempt. The Canadian miner also rejected the offer, representing a premium of around 20%, saying it undervalued the company.
Cornerstone, with a market capitalization of C$120.5 million ($89 million), owns 15% of the touted Alpala copper-gold project, part of SolGold’s Cascabel asset.
It also has other gold, silver and copper projects in Ecuador and Chile.
Bigger than expected
A recent report showed Alpala is even bigger than expected, with 2.66 billion tonnes of copper at 0.53% copper-equivalent in the measured and indicated categories, and 544 million tonnes at 0.31% copper-equivalent in the inferred category.
Once developed, Alpala is expected to produce an average of 150,000 tonnes of copper, 245,000 ounces of gold and 913,000 ounces of silver in concentrate per year during its 55-year life-of-mine.
Over the first 25 years of mining, the average annual production is expected to be 207,000 tonnes of copper, 438,000 ounces of gold and 1.4 million ounces of silver.
Despite setbacks due to disruptions related to the coronavirus pandemic, SolGold aims to begin production in 2025.
SolGold chief executive, Nick Mather, has repeatedly said his team is building a company “as important to the development of Ecuador as BHP was to Australia.”
Copper hot spot
Over the past two years, Ecuador has attracted a flurry of interest from big miners looking to increase their exposure to copper. The highly conductive metal is in demand for use in renewable energy and electric vehicles, but big, new deposits are rare.
Diversified majors particularly favour large-scale, long-life projects, such as the one SolGold promises. BHP upped its stake in the company last year to 15.31% from 14.7%, becoming the miner’s top shareholder.
Ecuador aims to move from an explorer hotspot to a mining exporter. Its oil-led economy has been hit hard over the past few months.
The nation is currently reeling from both the spread of covid-19 and the collapse of global oil prices.
Prior to recent developments, the South American country expected to attract $3.7 billion in mining investments between 2019 and 2020, up significantly from $270 million in 2018.