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Kenmare Resource - Potential For Re-Reating (KMR)     

intractable - 20 Jun 2004 11:22

From the FT on the 19th June

http://search.ft.com/search/article.html?id=040619001094&query=kenmare&vsc_appId=totalSearch&state=Form

COMPANIES UK & IRELAND: Kenmare negotiates $269m loan
By John Murray Brown
Financial Times; Jun 19, 2004



One of the largest debt financings for an independent mining company was announced yesterday when Kenmare Resources agreed a $269m (146.5m) facility to develop the Moma titanium mine in Mozambique.

Drawdown of the debt is contingent on the Irish company raising equity of $79m, lifting the value of the project to $345m.

The company already has commitments of $55m from a number of large investment funds.

Documents will be posted to shareholders on Monday for an open offer to raise up to $42m.

A banker at NM Rothschild, lead advisers on the financing, said the debt package represented three times Kenmare's market capitalisation of $90m.

"I do not think there have been any listed mining companies who have done that," he said.

Among the lenders, the African Development Bank is lending $40m and the European Investment Bank $15m in senior debt and a $40m subordinated loan, reflecting the vital economic benefits to what is the poorest region of one of Africa's poorest countries.

Martin Curwen, of the EIB, said this was the first deal signed under the 2000 Cotonou agreement between the EU and African, Caribbean and Pacific countries.

He said EIB's presence would "provide comfort" to other lenders. "It is part of our mandate to support projects where the funding would not have been available from the financial markets," he said at yesterday's signing ceremony, attended by Castigo Langa, Mozambique's minister of mineral resources and energy.

KFW, the German development finance institution, is providing $50m, partly tied to the supply of electrical equipment by Siemens.

The Dutch development agency FMO is lending $15m. The only commercial bank involved is ABSA, the South African bank, which is lending $80m to support the purchase of South African goods and services by the mine.

The mine is expected to be in production in the second half of 2006, with annual output of 600,000 tonnes of ilmenite and other titanium minerals that supplies white pigment used in paint and toothpaste.

The company has already raised 4m to purchase a mineral separation plant in Western Australia, which is being dismantled and shipped to the site.

At full production, the mine will account for about 5 per cent of world supply. About two-thirds of world production is controlled by RTZ and Iluka, an Australian company spun out of the old Rennison Goldfields.

FT Comment

* There have been similar financings in the minerals sector but never where the borrowing is three times the borrower's market valuation. The Lihir gold project in Papua New Guinea raised $300m in 1995 but lenders had the comfort that Rio Tinto Zinc owned about 40 per cent of the company. Kenmare's project is 100 per cent-owned by Kenmare, a company that has no cash flow and would have reported a small loss of $40,000 last year but for interest on its bank deposits. This project clearly could transform its fortunes. There are offtake agreements in place for more than half the first five years' production with Dupont and Mitsui. Prices for mineral sands tend to be more stable than base metals, which behave more like a commodity dependent on capital goods demand. The current market cap is little more than the value of a year's production from the mine. An upgrade seems inevitable. Canaccord, the company's broker, has a current price target of 35p. This compares with a close of 17p, down 2p yesterday.


Copyright The Financial Times Ltd

stockdog - 25 Feb 2006 17:21 - 533 of 1136

Cousin boxer
You need to become a personal expert to be safe probably. Highly geared - big gains on small outlay - also big losses, bigger than outlay, possible. A few tips on a BB would be a very dangerous way to start IMHO. PS. let me know when you've found out and tell us all how to do it. lol!

sd

Dynamite - 26 Feb 2006 12:22 - 534 of 1136

Sorry to be off topic...Sd...It has taken me over 2 years to find a method that works for me with sb. In the past 23 weeks of my 'working' method of day trading with sb I have made a profit 19 of them. Only one of my 4 losing weeks was anything much and I lost the previous weeks gains. Currently up 350% since september. However, for the first two years or so I was one of those 90% of losers. I didn't lose much as I bet only 1pp until I could consistently gain. I now go up 1pp everytime I gain another 500.. Obviously it took me a long time at 1pp to get that first 500. The last 500 took 10 days the current one I am nearly there after 6 days. Hopefully it will continue but I do spend 4.5 hours a day glued to my screens and charts.
If you don't have that time companies like KMR are a good long term investment IMHO.

Have a good one.
Di

boxerdog - 26 Feb 2006 12:24 - 535 of 1136

Andy thank you.Please elaborate ""in the money"" by 23/7/09.i'm a bit thick.
Do only certain plc's trade in warrents.Like standard shares can i sell at any time?.

regards BD.

Andy - 26 Feb 2006 12:48 - 536 of 1136

boxerdog,

By "in the money" I mean that the value of the warrant and any premium will be equal to or more than the prevailing ordinary share price, otherwise you would lose money.

The warrant has a conversion price of 19p so if the ordinary share was, say, 10p, then you would not convert from the warrant, as you would be paying 9p per warrant more than the share is worth, and you could buy cheaper in the open market.

In this case, you would not convert, and your warrant would time expire, on the 23rd July 2009, and would be worthless, which is where the risk is.

And the warrants don't have the same tax advantages.

Not many companies issue warrants, although they are sometimes given as incentives in placings.

CURRENTLY this does look VERY unlikely in Kenmare's case, but you never know what's around the corner!

For example, there was an earthquake in Mozambique last week, no serious damage ,and thankfully only a few deaths, to the best of my knowledge, thank goodness, but I was surprised to hear they had even had one to be honest.

To see the earthquake news, click HERE

boxerdog - 26 Feb 2006 12:58 - 537 of 1136

Cheers Andy,Are they your posts over on ADVFN ?, "guessing they are" i've just read.
regards BD.

Andy - 26 Feb 2006 13:12 - 538 of 1136

boxer,

Yes I post as Andy on both sites, plus a few others.

zscrooge - 26 Feb 2006 20:47 - 539 of 1136

SD

Hope this helps and doesn't get me into trouble

http://www.financial-spread-betting.com/Spread-betting.html

http://www.advfn.com/cmn/fbb/thread.php3?id=10613301

http://www.advfn.com/column8/stop-stop-losses.html

stockdog - 26 Feb 2006 21:11 - 540 of 1136

Thanks, zscrooge - looks interesting.

sd

trelleck - 27 Feb 2006 10:52 - 541 of 1136

OT
Dynamite
Re post no 534: you've evidently worked up your s/b positions from modest beginnings. I'd like to try the same, but don't know where to start. Which s/b company lets you start at 1pp? Do you 'phone through for quotes or is it an online service?

All help gratefully received.

Dynamite - 27 Feb 2006 11:22 - 542 of 1136

Trelleck...cmc is who I use but having a lot of problems with them at the moment. You need an online service to get anywhere or else it will cost you dear. Good luck
Di

trelleck - 27 Feb 2006 11:34 - 543 of 1136

Dynamite

Thanks and good luck. It's nice to know it can be done without losing the capital whilst struggling up the learning curve.

stockdog - 27 Feb 2006 11:38 - 544 of 1136

Trelleck - also try Cantor. Good on-line service, plus once you've placed orders on-line very happy to move them closer to the action by phone even though below minimum phone roder size. Incredibly nice people even when only dealing 1 a point.

Tried to use CMC as first choice, but no good for Mac users like me (silly losing 10-15% of your market 'cos too lazy to X-platform the software!).

Someone should start a spreadbet thread!

sd

porky - 27 Feb 2006 13:47 - 545 of 1136

Nice to see a Mac user stockdog.
There really is no excuse for web pages not to be friendly to all users.
I would not change back to a PC for any price.
Cheers.

boxerdog - 27 Feb 2006 14:08 - 546 of 1136

stockdog,i too am intrested in getting in on SB.but fearful of making a fool of myself, have yet to take the plunge.
Have just had a look at the cantors website very interesting.Am i right in thinking that bets are limited to the FTSE 350,could i not use the system on such as KMR,RTD,VOG.etc,etc.
Am i correct in my interpertation of how it works.
ie, buy NEXT 16.40-16.50 @ 10 ppoint,NEXT rises 20p. PROFIT = 10 multiplied 15 = 150 assuming bought at midmarket 16.45.
Be patient .
regards BD.

stockdog - 27 Feb 2006 14:34 - 547 of 1136

Many small stocks are not SB-able by most websites I think. Don't really know - read the literature.

No- if spread is 16.40-16.50 you buy at 16.50. Then it risees 20p to 16.60-16.70 and you sell at 16.60. This is a 10p gain X 10 = 100.

BUT - your bet is NOT 10, it is limitless if the proce goes against you. You MUST decide your stop loss, then your bet is (price bought less stop loss) X xx per point. You nneed to read some guide or other before you start and choose a strategy.

Plan the trade and trade the plan - ALWAYS.

good lock

sd

aldwickk - 27 Feb 2006 17:20 - 548 of 1136

I have used IG index, but have now started using there CFD service, there is a wide range of AIM stocks with both + gold, oil ,copper,/$ and all the main world markets .

aldwickk - 27 Feb 2006 17:23 - 549 of 1136

SB's work out cheaper for small sums.

boxerdog - 27 Feb 2006 17:37 - 550 of 1136

aldwickk hi,what happens if a particular share goes XD.And therefore because of it drops back which is often the case, When you've backed it to go long

aldwickk - 27 Feb 2006 18:27 - 551 of 1136

They adjust the price ect: same goes for both SB's & CFD's its all explained to you just phone their help line.

Kivver - 27 Feb 2006 21:39 - 552 of 1136

oh im sorry i thought this was the kenmare thread lol.
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