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Is your chart still in play or did it break down?
$10 high today? Can't have been more than a few shares traded at that price.
I'm not complaining about today's action but tomorrow will be better with the Canadian TSX trading again after a long holiday weekend.
$bfarf...two followers on this board so far. I wonder what it will be a week from now?
I'm in with a starter position, this is looking super strong
What do you think about the gaps? I don't think they will fill unless bitcoin has a major correction
Agreed, don't think many actually believe anything that guy has to say
I think Williams is connected to and paid by Citron's Andrew Left and I think it's a sign that the shorts are finally getting ready to give up
Motley's Sean Williams is now recommending VFF
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/opinion-changed-3-marijuana-stocks-122100005.html
Village Farms is the Yolo cannabis ETF's 6th largest holding with 244k shares valued at 2.7 ml. check out the “Daily Holdings Data” from the attached link to see
https://www.advisorshares.com/fund/yolo
institutional buying has been on a tear with Morgan Stanley, Deutche Bank, Webber Allen, LPL Financial and Bank of America all establishing recent positions in VFF.
https://www.fool.com/quote/nasdaq/village-farms-international-inc/vff/major-holders/
Do I sound nervous, not a chance.
long $VFF since $4.50 us
What only you can post here? If you don't like my comment don't read it of just ignore.
GLTY
its possible the governor will still sign the bill prior to expiration of veto deadline removing all possible doubt for hemp farmers.
I would like to see the governor sign also even though the bill was passed unanimously which resulted in a super majority vote which means his signature is not required. But the bill is still subject to a veto by the governor until June 16th unless he has signed it too.
If House approves changes bill becomes law immediately barring veto by governor
Should the House of Representatives concur with the Senate's amendments to the Bill, HB 1325 will become law as a result of the super majority vote in both the House of Representative and the Senate, subject to the June 16 deadline for the Governor to veto bills — a highly unlikely proposition for a bill that passed both houses unanimously.
Bill Now Returns to House to Consider Senate's Amendments
https://www.otcmarkets.com/stock/VFF/news?id=228583
PR Newswire
VANCOUVER, May 16, 2019
Bill Now Returns to Texas House to Consider Senate's Amendments
VANCOUVER, May 16, 2019 /PRNewswire/ - Village Farms International, Inc. ("Village Farms" or the "Company") (TSX: VFF) (NASDAQ: VFF) applauds the passage yesterday by a unanimous vote of House Bill 1325 ("HB 1325" or "the Bill") today by the Texas State Senate. HB 1325 is a bi-partisan bill that, if passed into law, will establish a Texas Hemp Program, providing a regulatory and licensing framework for the cultivation and processing of hemp, as well as for products made from hemp, including cannabidiol (CBD). On April 24, 2019, HB 1325 was unanimously passed by the Texas State House of Representatives.
As per normal legislative procedure, HB 1325 will now return to the House of Representatives for consideration of the Senate's amendments to the Bill. Should the House of Representatives not concur with the Senate's amendments, the Bill will proceed to Conference Committee for resolution, and then proceed to a final vote by both the House of Representatives and the Senate. Should the House of Representatives concur with the Senate's amendments to the Bill, HB 1325 will become law as a result of the super majority vote in both the House of Representative and the Senate, subject to the June 16 deadline for the Governor to veto bills — a highly unlikely proposition for a bill that passed both houses unanimously.
"This is another very positive step forward in the legislative process toward the legalization of the cultivation and processing of hemp in Texas," said Michael DeGiglio, CEO of Village Farms. "We are encouraged by this progress and look forward to HB 1325 being passed into law and the considerable opportunities that will present for our Company."
About Village Farms International, Inc.
After Texas house approves the amended bill it looks like it goes back to senate for full vote...at least that's what it looks like to me but wtfdik when it comes to politics
https://capitol.texas.gov/BillLookup/BillStages.aspx?LegSess=86R&Bill=HB1325
Back to Texas House for another vote today due to minor changes made to the bill in the Senate.
mkt's closed good friday, next week will_be epic
don't be duped out of your shares, now is the time to buy not sell
I'm betting $US 9.81 is the low...we'll see
there won't be a better opportunity to BUY!
funds likely paid for that hit piece orchestrating panic and buying in huge today. People selling when they should be buying to take advantage, 7 mln shares traded by noon.
I'm all in already, wish I could add this dip
GO $VFF next leg up starts today
sorry, copied the wrong disclosure on the first fool article,
should have been "The Motley Fool recommends Anheuser-Busch InBev NV and Nasdaq."
First fool puts a story out on Friday morning trashing VFF. https://www.fool.com/investing/2019/04/05/3-marijuana-stocks-to-avoid-like-the-plague-in-apr.aspx
with this disclosure line at the bottom of Friday’s story:
“The Motley Fool recommends HEXO and OrganiGram Holdings.” with no mention of owning VFF shares.
Then Saturday, after they apparently have their shares? out comes this article praising VFF:
https://www.fool.ca/2019/04/06/up-378-this-year-how-a-cannabis-producer-is-planning-to-tap-into-the-22-billion-global-cbd-market/
with this disclosure at the bottom of the second story.
“The Motley Fool owns shares of Village Farms International, Inc. Village Farms International, Inc.”
Quite a difference from one day to the next.
Makes it look like they were trying to drive the share price down and keep it as low as they possible while buying shares on Friday???
Nice!! there will be a huge gap up but why announce pre-market when announcing after market open would avoid the gap up?
Bottom in?
Link: Village Farms live presentation at Roth_Conference
Village farms group presentation is scheduled to begin today, Tuesday Mar, 19th
8:30 Pacific / 11:30 Eastern
http://wsw.com/webcast/roth33/vff/
Bought in today @ $2.25, I hope we're near the bottom.
My other stock is vff, both are short term volatile but long term should be golden
600 more shares added today...glta
Getting real obvious some shorter's are worried.
I guess they were hoping for bad news.
Probably not a good stock to short.
I thank my lucky stars I found this about a month ago, I love this company.
Anyone know, is VFF trading today on the Canadian exchange?
$VFFIF
Gran Colombia Gold: Extremely Deep-Value Gold Miner
https://seekingalpha.com/article/4216358-gran-colombia-gold-extremely-deep-value-gold-miner
Summary
•The stock trades at less than 3x forward earnings.
•Investors have ignored the company due to earlier financial trouble and no sell-side coverage.
•Dramatic valuation divergence from other gold miners, coupled with ongoing growth, creates a setup for huge returns.
Editor's note: Seeking Alpha is proud to welcome Harris Perlman, CFA as a new contributor. It's easy to become a Seeking Alpha contributor and earn money for your best investment ideas. Active contributors also get free access to the SA PRO archive. Click here to find out more »
(Note: all ‘$’ figures are USD, not CAD, unless stated otherwise.)
Gran Colombia is a long-forgotten, profitable and growing gold miner that is trading below 3x forward earnings.
Why does this opportunity exist? I believe the reasons are:
1.Small size (<$100mm market cap before warrant dilution)
2.No analyst coverage
3.Old shareholders were wiped out by high debt, lower gold prices, and failure of a major development project
4.Improved operating results are obscured by one-time financial expenses from balance sheet restructurings
5.New shares in the hands of former convert holders are likely weighing on the stock
6.Underground operations preclude useful NAV analysis
7.Co-chairman's image was tarnished after his oil company blew up
8.Fear of Colombia exposure
Segovia and Marmato Assets
The company has two main assets, both in Colombia, called Segovia and Marmato. Segovia is a high-grade underground operation that includes three primary mines and has been producing since 1852; it represents ~90% of current production. Marmato makes up the remainder. Gran Colombia went public via reverse-merger in 2010, when the company paid $200mm to acquire Segovia. The idea was to modernize the mines, increase production, and reduce costs. In 2011, the company completed a merger of equals with Medoro Resources, owner of Marmato.
Marmato is a huge deposit, which Gran Colombia planned to develop as an open-pit mine, and thereby catapult into the ranks of major gold mining companies. Marmato’s NPV was thought to be around $1 billion at $1200/oz gold. Unfortunately, to develop Marmato required re-locating the local population, who literally lived on top of the deposit. Massive local opposition to the project has prevented Gran Colombia from developing the open pit; Marmato's current production comes from its small underground operations. Although management perhaps deserves blame for under-estimating the difficulty (or impossibility) of developing an open pit mine in a populated area, they aren't the only ones in Colombia to have made that mistake. AngloGold Ashanti, the third-largest multinational gold miner, was recently forced to halt development of its huge La Colosa open-pit project due to local opposition. AngloGold has sunk $900mm into its three Colombian projects (of which La Colosa is the largest), and the company still has nothing to show for it.
Challenges and Dilution
As Gran Colombia struggled in vain to push the Marmato development forward, it also struggled to reduce costs quickly at Segovia. When the company acquired Segovia, the operations were producing ~55k oz/year at a high cash cost of around $1300/oz. The mines had poor infrastructure and minimal automation, the result of decades of under-investment and under-management. In 2013, as the gold price was crashing, Gran Colombia was going into debt to invest in mine upgrades and a new mill complex. In 2015 the company started to benefit from its investments, as well as a weaker Colombian peso and a renegotiated agreement with some mining contractors, but by that time it had already defaulted on its debt. Debtholders turned the screws, and the company was forced to restructure its notes as highly dilutive convertible debentures.
Turnaround
Despite the financial turmoil, the company was successful in turning Segovia into a sizable (and growing) low-cost operation; production has increased from ~55k oz/year to ~200k oz/year, and cash costs have fallen from ~$1300/oz to less than $650/oz. Segovia’s current expected mine life is 2026, which was already extended by four years in 2017. Since underground mines (as compared to pit mines) typically explore and book new resources only as they expand, I expect that mine life will be continuously extended. This year the company has already made multiple announcements (here and here) of encouraging drill results at Segovia.
Source: Author based on company filings
Since Gran Colombia’s first debt restructuring in early 2016, many investors have ignored its equity due to the presence of its highly dilutive (and also potentially more attractive) debentures. However, the company has cleaned up its capital structure in the past year, and completed a major refinancing in May. Subsequent to the end of Q2, its last convertible debt was all converted into equity. The only remaining debt is $93mm of gold-linked notes, due 2024, which provide upside to noteholders at gold prices above $1250/oz. The notes are structured such that the noteholders get upside exposure to 23k oz of production in the first year, and lower amounts as the principal is paid down; because this represents only around 10% of the company's production, the equity retains 90% of the upside to the gold price. The company has ~$25mm of cash, which will increase by a further $20mm after eventual exercise of in-the-money warrants. Net debt is now comfortably below 1x EBITDA. In my opinion, the equity is now very investable.
Forward Estimates
To estimate forward earnings, I assume the following:
1.Production will increase to 240k oz/year, from a ~230k oz run-rate in September; management expects to reach 300k oz in a couple of years (according to this recent video presentation, 14:10).
2.AISC (All-In Sustaining Cost) will decline slightly to $900/oz, from $905/oz in 1H18, due to increasing scale and a weaker Colombian peso.
3.The fully-diluted share count of 63mm assumes exercise of all outstanding warrants and options, excluding those with strike prices above $30/share.
Source: Author based on company filings and author's own forecasts
Although the P/E output from my income statement forecast may seem surprisingly low, I do not believe that any of the inputs are aggressive; in fact, they may prove to be too pessimistic. Segovia's production has grown at an annualized pace of around 18% over the past seven years, and yet my production forecast (of which Segovia is around 90%) is only 5% above September's run-rate. Moreover, the Colombian peso is down against the US dollar by approximately 10% since the first half of this year, and yet I assume that AISC will drop by less than 1%. Because there is no analyst coverage and the company is not widely followed, it is hard to say how these forecasts differ from the market's current expectations.
Interestingly, the company’s current accounting looks conservative. Generally, gold miners’ stated AISCs are misleadingly low because large amounts of capex are bucketed as exploration/development activities (excluded from AISC), even though such activities are necessary to offset production declines at other mines. However, Gran Colombia is currently including almost all of its capex in AISC. Thus, while the company is growing production via ongoing exploratory drilling and mine expansion, these growth investments are being counted as if they are part of normal day-to-day operations. I wouldn’t be surprised if this overstates the real steady-state cost structure by $10mm or more (equivalent to >$0.10/share of free cash flow).
Management
The company is led by Co-Chairman Serafino Iacono, a well-connected entrepreneur with a history of making natural resource deals in Latin America, particularly Colombia. Unfortunately, he may be best-known for building Pacific Rubiales (later renamed "Pacific Exploration") which became the largest independent oil company in Colombia before eventually imploding as a result of the oil crash;a WSJ article suggests that management's overly aggressive deal-making was also partly to blame. Before Pacific Rubiales, Serafino managed an early-stage Venezuelan gold mining company called Bolivar Gold, which was successfully sold to Gold Fields in 2006 for C$450mm. My sources suggest that Serafino is a good guy, although I haven’t personally met him. According to Gran Colombia’s IR, Serafino and his family/associates together own roughly 10% of the stock, and the company is currently Serafino’s main focus.
Risk Considerations
Colombia exposure is a risk, but one that I am willing to underwrite. In addition to management’s long history in Colombia, the board includes one former Minister of Justice and one former Minister of Mines and Energy. One of the company’s challenges is that most of Colombia’s gold has historically been mined by independent “artisanal” miners operating without licenses. Gran Colombia has had increasing success in signing those people as contractors, but there is still some tension as the company (with support from the government) cracks down on unlicensed mining on its properties. In 2017, production at Segovia was shut down for over a month as artisanal miners went on strike; the result was that the company cut deals with more illegal miners and turned them into contractors.
Additionally, there is always some chance of gang/guerrilla-related violence. Last month Continental Gold, another company with mines in Colombia, suffered a setback when some of its geologists were murdered in the field. In 2015, Gran Colombia's Segovia operation was targeted by a paramilitary gang that murdered one miner and sought protection money from the company. Despite death threats, the company's miners pleaded with the company not to close the mines, since no production meant no income; in the end, operations were affected for less than two months (with no mention of whether any protection money was paid). To really get into the weeds and better understand the local security situation, I recommend reading this report, which includes the following excerpts:
"While extortion and control of mining areas continues for artisanal and small scale mining, extortion of large-scale mining companies seems less prevalent. According to local miners interviewed for this study, large-scale mining companies are no longer systematically paying extortion to guerrilla groups, as they used to (e.g. Mineros S.A.). However, other sources suggest that illegal armed groups still resort to the use of force, threats or intimidation when it comes to large-scale mining companies." (p.15)
"Large-scale companies in Antioquia [the region in which Segovia is located] are, to some extent (see section above regarding extortion), insulated from illegal armed groups because of the protection provided by private security companies and state security forces." (p.15)
I think it is fair to say that maintaining security is a constant component of mining in Colombia, as in some other developing countries. While Colombia’s security situation has improved significantly over the years, it is still an overhang.
Valuation
The stock is dramatically undervalued relative to comps. The largest, most liquid gold miners like Barrick Gold and Newmont Mining trade at over 20x forward earnings. Big gold miners generally own assets in a mix of low-risk (Nevada/Canada/Australia) and higher-risk (Latin America/Africa) geographies. Unfortunately, I don’t believe there are any other US or Canada-listed Colombian gold miners with producing mines (Continental Gold’s mines are still in development). I also took a look at the Bogotá stock exchange; the sole listed miner there is Mineros SA, which was the largest gold miner in the country until it was overtaken by Gran Colombia. Mineros actually looks kind of cheap at first glance, trading at ~9x my estimate of run-rate earnings. However, production at Mineros’ low-cost alluvial operation in Colombia is declining (-18% in 1H18, per company filings), while its Nicaraguan mine is barely breaking even and is subject to increasing political risk. Besides Mineros, I looked through a couple dozen Colombian stocks and wasn’t able to find anything below 10x earnings.
Given Segovia's growth profile and low production cost, I believe the stock is worth 15x forward earnings, or approximately $10/share, representing close to 500% upside. If the company continues to execute, then fair value should increase over time. Importantly, the company is now funding its growth from operating cash flow; that eliminates the need for financing, which is commonly a problem for junior miners. The greatest risk to the thesis is the price of gold. If gold were to fall to $1000/oz then I estimate that the company would earn only around $0.10 of EPS; at a 10x earnings multiple (reflecting thinner margins), the stock would be worth $1/share, or ~40% downside. Additionally, there remain operational tail risks, such as a prolonged conflict with artisanal miners or gangs/guerrillas, which could seriously impair the value of the company's assets. Overall, I believe the very large upside potential more than compensates investors for bearing these risks.
Disclosure: I am/we are long TPRFF.
Earnings Call Transcript Gran Colombia Gold Corp. (OTCPK:TPRFF) Q2 2018 Results Earnings Conference Call August 15, 2018 9:30 AM ET
Executives
Mike Davies - CFO
Lombardo Paredes - CEO
Analysts
Operator
Welcome to the Gran Colombia Gold Q2 2018 Results Webcast. My name is Christine, and I will be your operator for today's call. At this time all participants are in a listen-only mode. Later we will conduct a question-and-answer session. Please note that this conference is being recorded.
I will now turn the call over to Mike Davies; Chief Financial Officer. You may begin.
Mike Davies
Great thanks Christine. Good morning and thank you for joining us today for our 2018 second quarter and first half results webcast. Joining me on the webcast this morning is our CEO, Lombardo Paredes. I’ll first go through our prepared remarks regarding our performance in the first half of this year and then Lombardo will be available as we open things up for the Q&A session.
Before we proceed to presentation, I would first like to draw your attention to our legal disclaimer regarding forward-looking statements that may be made by us during the webcast this morning. Each quarter I have been providing you with an update on our progress against our stated priorities to execute our strategy in 2018.
Our first objective this year focused on the final improvements to our capital structure. We’re pleased to say that we have successfully closed this chapter with the elimination of all of the convertible debt that was put in place back in early 2016 reducing the potential dilution to shareholders from above 95 million shares under the former capital structure to about 63 million under the new structure.
With the issuance of shares settled at 2018 debentures earlier this week, we now have 48.2 million common shares issued and outstanding. We have reduced our total debt from approximately 180 million at the time of the debt restructuring in early 2016 to 93 million at present represented by our 2024 Gold Notes. The Gold Notes are currently unlisted and we are working through the listing application for TSX at this time.
We also have 12 million new warrants outstanding that were issued as part of the Gold Notes financing in April. We’re pleased to say that we have listing approval for these warrants and they should start trading on the TSX in early September under the symbol GCM.WT.B.
The second objective we've set for this year was to continue the implementation of the object optimized mine plan at Segovia. Segovia is our primary cash generating assets and was recently recognized in the mining intelligence study as one of the top five highest grade underground gold mining operations globally in 2017. We expect to invest about $30 million this year in the continuation of the exploration, development, expansion and modernization programs at Segovia of which we spent close to $16 million in the first half.
Of this total expenditure about 8 million was spent on exploration and development. We spent almost 5 million in various programs taking place within our mines upgrading mining equipment, improving infrastructure such as via [PK and hoisting] systems that move people and material in and out of the mines, ventilation improvements at Providencia and El Silencio this year, health and safety improvements and more.
And we also spent just over $2 million through the first half this year with some further equipment upgrades at our Maria Dama plant and its lab. Construction of the El Chocho tailings storage facility which started receiving material ahead of schedule in July and the commencement of construction of the new filter press which will be commissioned in 2019.
The water treatment plant implemented at Maria Dama in 2017 is continuing to do its job eliminating our exposure to environmental discharge fees likely we had incurred in the past. Overall execution of our 2018 capital investment programs at Segovia is moving on nicely.
https://seekingalpha.com/article/4199378-gran-colombia-gold-corp-tprff-ceo-lombardo-paredes-q2-2018-results-earnings-call-transcript
NEWS! Gran Colombia Gold Announces it Will Settle 100% of its 2018 Debentures at Maturity With Common Shares; Expanding 2018 Drill Program to Test Extensions of High-Grade Discovery at Depth in its El Silencio Mine
TORONTO, Aug. 07, 2018 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Gran Colombia Gold Corp. (TSX:GCM) announced today that it gave notice on August 3, 2018 to the trustee (the “Trustee”) for its Senior Unsecured Convertible Debentures due 2018 (the “2018 Debentures”) that on maturity on August 11, 2018 (the “Maturity Date”), pursuant to the provisions of the underlying indenture (the “Indenture”), the Company has elected to satisfy its obligation to repay 100% of the outstanding principal amount of its 2018 Debentures, and all accrued and unpaid interest thereon (collectively, the “Outstanding Balance”), by issuing and delivering common shares. The volume weighted average trading price of the Company’s common shares on the Toronto Stock Exchange for the 20 consecutive trading days ending five trading days before the Maturity Date exceeded US$1.95 per share. Therefore, any elections received by the Trustee from holders of 2018 Debentures electing to receive cash and shares on the Conversion Date (as defined herein) shall be null and void.
Location of El Silencio Mine Deep Channel Sampling Program and Planned Drill Holes
As of August 3, 2018, the aggregate principal amount of the 2018 Debentures issued and outstanding was approximately US$33.0 million, and as such, the Company expects that it will be issuing a total of approximately 17.0 million common shares on August 13, 2018 (the “Conversion Date”) to settle the Outstanding Balance, bringing its total issued and outstanding common shares as of the Conversion Date to approximately 48.2 million. Holders of the 2018 Debentures maintain their right to transfer or convert their 2018 Debentures prior to the close of business on August 10, 2018.
Serafino Iacono, Executive Co-Chairman of Gran Colombia, commented, “We are pleased to conclude this final chapter of our effort to simplify our capital structure and improve our ratio of debt to equity. With increasing awareness of our under-valued equity, we hope that this increase in shares outstanding will enhance liquidity in the market for our stock. At the end of June 2018, our cash position stood at approximately US$25 million and the return of the 2018 Debentures’ sinking fund will add another US$3.5 million of unrestricted cash back into our treasury.
Our primary focus continues to center on exploring and developing our cash-generating Segovia Operations, recently acknowledged as one of the top five high-grade underground gold operations globally in 2017. On June 18, 2018, we announced that the ongoing channel sampling program at the deepest levels of the El Silencio mine was successful in identifying high-grade veins within the current mineral reserve and resource envelope and is playing a key role in the definition of veins that will be incorporated into updated mineral reserve and resource estimates planned for early next year. We are now ready to commit an additional US$2.3 million toward additional drilling through the balance of 2018 to follow up on this discovery to incorporate it into our future development and production plan.”
El Silencio, the oldest and deepest mine in the Segovia district, has 45 levels descending to a depth of over 800 meters. As previously announced, a total of 424 channels were sampled in the down-plunge extensions of the north and south ore-shoots. Of this total, 291 channels, or 69%, averaged over 10 g/t Au and 163 channels, or 38%, averaged over 30 g/t Au. This additional drilling will aim to extend the north, middle and south ore-shoots down-plunge with the objective of testing extensions another 200 meters below the currently delineated resource. The drilling program, expected to commence in September, will be a combination of conventional drilling with 50 meter by 50 meter nominal center spacing on the north ore-shoot and directional drilling on the middle and south ore-shoots.
Please refer to Attachment 1 to this press release for an image related to the additional drilling program at El Silencio which shows the outline of the area in which the channel sampling program was undertaken and the location of the planned drill holes to intercept and test the three ore-shoots, a copy of which is also available on the Company's website at www.grancolombiagold.com