Aurelian may attract rival bids
posted on
Jul 26, 2008 01:39PM
San Gold Corporation - one of Canada's most exciting new exploration companies and gold producers.
It looks like ARU is being played against the new mining legislation in Ecuador. The fact that it was endorsed by ARU management makes me think that either they were 'bought' by Kinross through employment deals or other incentives, or that they know something about the new legislation and honestly think this is the best deal they can get. I'll be interested to see if the deal can be delayed until the legislation comes out, and whether any other offers materialize.
http://www.nationalpost.com/todays_p...
Jonathan Ratner, Financial Post Published: Saturday, July 26, 2008
Despite the run-up in prices for bullion, the small-cap gold space has been a disappointment for investors. And for those who own Aurelian Resources Inc. (ARU/TSX) the ongoing development of new mining laws in Ecuador has made things much worse.
Fortunate for them, Aurelian received a $1.2-billion friendly all-stock takeover offer from Tier 1 producer Kinross Gold Corp. (K/TSX) that sent shares of the junior miner up more than 40% on Thursday. And Aurelian may have more room to run if a bidding war emerges as some analysts are predicting.
"We believe that Kinross' bid will be the start of a bidding war for one of the most coveted undeveloped gold deposits in the world," Michael Gray, analyst at Genuity Capital Markets, told clients. He suggested that Kinross must have "sufficient in-country intelligence" to convince them to jump the gun with a bid in light of Ecuador's political uncertainty.
Wendell Zerb at Canaccord Adams called the chances of a rival offer "moderate" at roughly 50% given Aurelian's high profile, high quality Fruta del Norte project, which is Ecuador's largest gold deposit. The analyst suggested Barrick Gold Corp. (ABX/ TSX) and Newmont Mining Corp. (NEM/NYSE) as the most likely candidates.
Although other producers are interested in Fruta Del Norte, the uncertainty of the restructuring of the country's mining laws will likely scare them off, said Michael Curran at RBC Capital Markets. As a result, the analyst told clients that there appears to be a low probability of a competing bid.
Ecuador's new mining man-date was revealed in April, 2008 and its forced Aurelian to suspend its drilling activities. On July 18, Aurelian said a draft law was completed after finding a previous version "reasonable."
Why then, would an Aurelian shareholder not wait for a recovery in the share price pending the new draft legislation, Credit Suisse analyst Anita Soni asked.