InvestorsHub Logo

mick

12/11/12 11:02 AM

#301529 RE: Penny Roger$ #301520

i was reading on clowns as i like to. i didn't know a clown museum in wisc.

found out by watching history channel

i think called 'international clown hall of fame.'

i like red skelton history paintings of clowns.

mick

12/11/12 11:23 AM

#301551 RE: Penny Roger$ #301520

part one; this is writer's respect to SAGDSAGD/12-10-12
writer Special Situation Newsletter #26 - July 8, 2011

mick chat with ceo yesterday!
this deal didn't workout due to mining changes in this area of claim!


Start-up South American Gold Corp. (SAGD.OB) offers an early bird adventure in going after three separate multi-million ounce gold plays in one of the least explored most promising gold development areas left on the planet.

To add to its initial Santacruz Property SAGD's goal is to make two more major new Columbian acquisitions. As our future national debt rockets toward $70 trillion and the buying power of our U.S. paper currency continuously deteriorates going for gold never made more sense. July 8, 2011

Newsletters have been opened by two to three million online investors. We have an amazing open rate range of 20% to 33%. If you have not already done so, please join our financial family.

mick;
the reading above show influence one has on open market;

Doomsayers argue we are in the eye of a financial hurricane which will plunge our U.S. economy double dipping into a new Great Depression and a new stock market crash.

Reported inflation, which ignores the higher costs of driving your car or feeding your family,is relatively low in the U.S. as we keep our interest rates artificially low. Spendthrift global leaders are destroying every currency including our own.

Zimbabwe's 10 trillion dollar note is only the beginning and reminiscent of the famous Vampire note in pre Hitler Germany where the engraver who designed the honest worker added a lessvisible vampire sucking the life's blood from his throat. Today many hard -working, middle-class Americans feel like that worker too. No wonder we have a Tea Party!

The Euro is collapsing and the U.S. dollar untrustworthy. The U.S. government continues to spend money it doesn't have-an out of control reality you and I must face. Over the long run the price of gold should continue to rise as frighten investors everywhere flee the depreciation of their currencies caused by spendthrift politicians whose refusal to stop spending fuels a continuous flight from the risk of holding currency and its equivalents. Unless our elected Big Spenders make an unlikely U turn, a $70trillion national debt awaits in our future.

Worry over paper currency is worldwide, not just in the U.S. where Jimmy Rogers has appeared on television stating our currency will become worthless. Over the next decade or so Rogers sees the price of gold, which even after recently correcting from its all time high was back up to about $1,544 an ounce, rising to the $3,000 to $5,000 level.

It is simply part of a long run shift to holding more hard assets as spendthrift governments all over the globe spend more than they can afford triggering inflation. The new middle classes of China and India by buying all sorts of things lift the price of commodities like energy and other basic commodities needed to expand infrastructure.

On gold specifically, nations like China and India are buying gold. So are their people who want another store of value than currency. Jewelry also has become hot again.

Huge demand has come from gold ETFs and also from hedge funds speculating in the barbaric metal. While mining companies have rushed to develop and produce more gold, production increases take time. Mine output expanded 7% in 2009 but only 3% last year. By 2014 mine production should actually start dropping and gold demand could outstrip supply for several years.

Flight from the risk of currency devaluation and diversification from paper currencies are lasting trends with the U.S. governments, federal, state and local all overextended.

We are not Doomsayers. Still, the purchasing power of currency will continue decline, some years faster some slower, but steadily. So owning hard assets and having some percentage of gold and gold stocks in your overall portfolio never made more sense.

No matter what happens our currency is going to lose more of its spending power annually. Our late financial pathfinder Sir John Templeton's basic tenet was that none of us would ever live to see another year when a U.S. dollar bought as much in December as it did in January. Long run, based upon his reliance on the Power of Positive Thinking , Sir John remained convinced that still evolving mankind would improve to keep making the world better , even as all the paper currencies of the world would continue to depreciate and buy less and less. It is nothing to panic about; it is just a fact of life we all should take into consideration like death and taxes.

At FFN we are thrilled this issueto publish the very first article anywhere on South AmericanGold Corp. (SAGD.OB) , an exciting new early stage gold development company and its daring entrepreneurial efforts to discover three multi-million ounce gold properties in the least explored formerly most dangerous and therefore least picked over part of newly safe Columbia.

With an unusually experienced management team which really understands the local area, the enterprise has tremendous long run potential. That this story has not yet been told to investors is frosting on our cake. You are the first to get the story looking through entrepreneurial eyes of what SAGD could look like in a few years if SAGD's strategy unfolds as planned. Another scoop for writer.

pix of ceo;

[-chart]ih.constantcontact.com/fs070/1101855435216/img/32.jpg[/chart]

mick;
this write up is huge imho.

International investors from Switzerland, Germany, U.K., Canada, Israel, Lebanon and Panama flew from Medellin over 500 miles deeper toward the Columbian border with Ecuador. Then the group transferred to military helicopters which landed guided by brush fires lit by heavily armed soldiers.

Everyone exiting, including South American Gold President Ray De Motte (left) and Editor Bob Flaherty (right) , was ordered to keep moving quickly because FARC guerillas were rumored to be in the area. Next came a bumpy winding ride up around a mountain to the still operating but antiquated El Diamente Mine, which also not only serves as a base camp for South American Gold but for local security too.

The initial Santacruz Gold Project is the first of De Motte's three daring entrepreneurial efforts to discover three separate multimillion ounce gold properties in the least explored formerly most dangerous and therefore least picked over part of newly safe Columbia. With an unusually experienced management team which really understands the local area, this new enterprise has tremendous long run potential.

South American Gold Corp. (SAGD.OB)

http://www.sagoldcorp.com/v1/

Start-up South American Gold Corp. (SAGD.OB) offers an early bird adventure in going after three separate multi-million ounce gold plays in one of the least explored most promising gold development areas left on the planet. To add to its initial Santacruz project SAGD's goal is to make two more major new Columbian acquisitions. As our future national debt rockets toward $70 trillion and the buying power of our U.S. paper currency continuously deteriorates going for gold never made more sense.

=========================================================

Recent Price: $0.47 Balance Sheet as March 31, 2011 (Unaudited)

Market Capitalization: $37.2 million Total Assets: $1.2 million
Recent Trading Range: $0.41-1.10 Total Liabilities: $0.2 million

Shares Outstanding: 79.2 million Shareholders' Equity: $1 million

Float Outstanding: 66.2 million

update from ray yesterday;

89 MILLIO O/S STANDING

RESTRICTED 10 MILLION

ray said check website for more updates;

==========================================================

Recommendation

High Hopes: Last March 23 to 28 in addition to viewing the initial gold project of South American Gold Corp., I attended an International gold investing conference in Columbia's totally modernized Medellin .

Locally proud of being the city of the perpetual spring because of the evenness of its temperature, Medellin in l999 was correctly avoided as "the murder capital of the world." In contrast, Medellin received a well deserved award in 2009 as "the safest city in South America.

" This dramatic transformation in Columbia has created an exciting investment opportunity for South American Gold Corp. (SAGD.OB) and its entrepreneur President and CEO Ray De Motte featured this issue.

With the entire world to choose from, De Motte has focused on the potentially rich Santacruz prospect in Guachaves, located in the Department (state) of Nariño, Columbia where pastsecurity problems like worries executives and workers might be kidnapped and held for ransomfrightened off mining prospectors.

Daringly, his strategy is to seek his riches in parts of Columbia like SAGD's initial Santacruz Project near the border with Ecuador which are newly safe enough to develop but are not picked over and bid up like many other parts of Columbia.


In addition, De Motte wants to make two new acquisitions at hopefully bargain prices in similar newly safe areas to diversify risk. After proper and necessary, but time consuming steps are taken, SAGD hopes that each of the three projects will reveal a multi-million ounce gold deposit or more.

If just one of the three projects clicks, SAGD will be made. If all three work out, early bird investors will share an El Dorado.

Now in the early formation stage, SAGD is setting the stage for four ways to win:
1.buying promising properties in past gold producing places which have not been picked over at bargain prices,

2.identifying potential multi-million ounce gold deposits and longer run benefiting from the increasing price of gold

3.also from proving up any deposits found from the inferred to indicated to measured categories.

4.
Each deposit upgrade to a superior category would add a quantum value to the core company.

In Columbia where rich deposits abound to be discovered, lightening can strike. The stock of Ventana Gold, which had two projects in Columbia, went from $0.54 to $13 when it was taken over by AUX Canada owned by Brazilian billionaire Eike Batistia. Continental Gold with a mine in Columbia has gone from $0.50 to $8.25.

The goal of a Flaherty Special Situation is a gain of 50% to 100% over two years. We believe the stock of SAGD can reach possibly double that range and more if management executes its current plans and succeeds in identifying multiple multimillion ounce gold deposits.

The Dramatically Improved Business Environment in Columbia!

In just a decade Columbia has changed from one of the worst to one of the best places in which to do business and to invest. It now offers the best special situation opportunities for gold exploration and development in the mining world today.

Colombia's support of private initiative and market institutions so evident in numerous reforms has resulted in impressive economic progress. Colombians credit former President Alvaro Uribe and his successor President Juan Manuel Santos, a tough former Defense Minister, with ending the violence caused by the insurgency of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Columbia (FARC) and jump-starting the country's economy.

Harvard and Oxford educated, Santos is continuing to stress safety, economic development and close cooperation with the U.S. military in keeping his defense forces up to snuff.

Neighbors are a big problem. Ecuador broke relations with Columbia after Columbia used deadly force to raid a FARC camp there. Venezuela's Hugo Chavez closed the border because Columbia allows the U.S. military the use of six bases. Captured records indicated Cuba-backed Chavez was helping to finance FARC which adds to the friction.

Still, in comparison with 13 years ago, individual safety and the possibility for economic development in Columbia is dramatically improved. To encourage their youth and create jobs Columbia is bending over backwards to assist companies in developing its natural resources.

mick;
i have to do in maybe part two or even part 3
ending here;



mick

12/11/12 12:05 PM

#301554 RE: Penny Roger$ #301520

part two/part of company history; this is writer's respect to SAGD /\SAGD/12-10-12
writer Special Situation Newsletter #26 - July 8, 2011

mick chat to ceo yesterday!
this deal didn't workout due to mining changes in this area of claim!

Start-up South American Gold Corp. (SAGD.OB) offers an early bird adventure in going after three separate multi-million ounce gold plays in one of the least explored most promising gold development areas left on the planet.

In the early 1500s Spanish Conquistadors entered Columbia and it became the chief country from which to send gold to Spain. Prior to l937 Columbia was the largest producer of gold in all of North and South America. Unfortunately, rising drug violence (90% of the cocaine entering the U.S. was processed in Columbia) and the insurgency of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Columbia (FARC) which turned to drugs and kidnapping to finance their idealistic cause, put the nation's viability in question.

About 1999 Columbia became generally too dangerous for most mining companies to do much exploration with the FARC fighters then winning and cartel drug violence, killings and kidnappings out of control.

To combat narco- terrorism, spur economic recovery, strengthen democratic institutions and respect for human rights and provide humanitarian assistance to internally displaced persons a Plan Columbia Program was designed.About 2002 under former President Alvaro Uribe, who boosted the army significantly and with a lot of help and support from the U.S. government military, Columbia gradually turned around and became safer. In 2009 early bird junior mining companies and some of the majors again became active.

During the decade of danger exploration in the western mountainous Columbia Cordillerawhich runs right down the entire country was seriously interrupted even though promising small scale mining of high grade veins existed there even before the Conquistadors arrived.

Responding positively to the challenges, Columbia's government became more capitalistic, encouraging business investment and the creation of jobs. Amnesty for past drug crimes was offered and the vast majority jumped at the chance for a new start and appear to be trying to turn over new leaf.

With impressive infrastructure improvements in mass transportation, energy, housing and local security, the government is sincerely trying to improve theenvironment so young people will have more hope for better lives and will seek education. Opportunities for women have increased and senoritas jokingly nicknamed one new government skyscraper "the intelligence building" because only females can work in it.

Importantly, Columbia has initiated business friendly reforms, many favorable to the mining industry in particular. For instance, the mining code of 2001 includes a low 4% royalty rate to encourage sustainable development and invigoration of the national economy. The mining code ordains the principle of environmental sustainability throughout the mining cycle. At the same time the code established the simultaneity of both technical and environmental viability studies and increased speed and efficiency in the process.

Overall, the people of Columbia have grown tired of the mindless violence. In voting a vast majority put life and safety before liberty. While the people want liberty too, without safety liberty cannot be enjoyed. T shirts are everywhere with messages to end violence and respect life. Here is a hard working people filled hope for a better future and the joy of living in an upbeat improving nation. (I hope we in America will feel that way again too.)

Tourists are returning and today's local young people feel safe enough to go out and party and have fun. In a great square created as part of a huge modern transportation project an outdoor samba class was being taught to about 50 swaying young people. Hundreds of onlookers not only watched, but joined in sensuous dancing as intoxicating rhythms filled the air.

Current President Juan Manuel Santos won election by a huge margin as voters confirmed preserving the improved safety was a high national priority. So President Santos has a mandate to continue the capitalistic friendly policies of President Uribe and a military partnership with the U.S. In summary, the Columbian government has a message for the foreign investment community -Columbia is open for business!

=========================================================

Company History

In October 2010 this early stage gold development explorer went public by backing into a shell company Grosvenor Exploration , Inc. and changing its name to South American Gold Corp. Trading commenced on the OTC Bulletin Board under the symbol OTC BB: SAGD but has been very light with hardly any shares changing hands in some weeks. Average daily share trading for the latest three months is under 900 shares.

Also in October 2010 veteran mining executive Raymond De Motte became CEO and subsequently assembled a highly experienced mining team with local know how to exploit opportunities in Columbia's last remaining gold frontier, which includes SAGD's highly promising initial Santacruz Project.

Some rural or border areas had been too dangerous to even enter during the worst of the period. The best opportunities remaining were in the least picked over properties and a lot of it could be acquired on at bargain prices.

De Motte went after a private company Kata Enterprises, which owned 85% of the intriguing Santacruz Project in the Department (state) of Nariño in one of the least explored areas not far from the Ecuador border where FARC fighters still come to cross over and regroup.

After a down payment of $1 million plus one million SAGD shares, SAGD agreed to buy Kata's remaining interest in Santacruz Project and spread payments of another $3 million in cash plus 3 million more SAGD shares out over 18 months to conserve precious start up seed capital.

This is only the first step in De Motte's ambitious plans to acquire at least three separate projects to diversify SAGD's risk. Past bitter experience has convinced him not to depend upon any single mining project, not matter how promising it looks. Any prospect can turn out to be very disappointing once the drilling starts.

Because in mining a company needs scale to achieve low costs per ounce, De Motte wants properties with at least the theoretical potential to contain a multimillion ounce deposit or a smaller outdated mine where the marginal production could be sharply and profitably improved by switching to modern technology. In both cases, SAGD's on the ground knowledge of local properties should come in very handy.

"We are looking at projects which in the past because of the political strife were shied away from," De Motte explains. "Even now that Columbia has become more secure people haven't come back in those areas yet.

We want to have the first mover advantage and go into those areas before other people and hit the ground running. Look at some other more developed areas and everybody and their mother is chasing their own tails for projects. It affects the entry costs. If you get in there after everybody else you pay sometimes two or three times too much.

We are focused on areas that historically have produced gold but where modern technology and exploration sampling have lagged or not even been used. We believe can find some projects which meet our acquisition criteria and get in there first."

Of the 40 or so prospective investors who attended the March Columbia Gold Investment Conference in Medellin all were non U.S investors. The biggest group appeared to be from Switzerland, followed by Germany, U.K. Canada and other spots like Israel, Lebanon and Panama etc. Some mentioned they attended because they had invested and made money in previous De Motte led companies. In March the initial $1.5 million private placement was completed and entirely subscribed by foreign investors so SAGD is virtually unknown to most U.S. investors.

Because no one was granted registration rights all of these foreign investors can be considered long term if management stays on track.

Some of the institutional investors were pleased that De Motte not only had valuable triumphs in the background, but had also made mistakes and appears to have learned from them.

On the plus side De Motte has taken two mining properties from exploration into production. On the minus side he admits making his share of goof ups. Paraphrasing the hilarious old Bob Dylan song "It ain't me, babe!" De Motte throws up his arms and laughs, " If you are looking for the perfect manger, it's not me."

Bitter experience from the volatility of silver prices has taught him to take into consideration and beware of the volatility of mining prices. "They don't always go up." So De Motte includes the unexpected wider fluctuation of gold prices among the biggest risks facing his new company.

Here is how De Motte sizes up that very real danger. The price of gold has soared and it will from time to time correct. But the price has gone up so spectacularly that the bottom floor under the price of gold has kept rising too. That takes a lot of the risk out for South American Gold. Before that gold floor was maybe $300 an ounce and now many mining majors use a rock bottom $1,000 for internal planning purposes.

De Motte figures even if gold fell back to $600, which is highly unlikely, largely open pit operations in Columbia and even probably underground mines using modern technology should remain profitable.

Dealing with unreal outsider expectations can also be a dilemma. De Motte stresses SAGD is a very early stage development company in its crucial foundation period where the stage must properly be set to execute its plan for its initial property and for the future new two or more acquisitions.

"Getting value out of this property will take time," De Motte sighs. "Everyone is so short term. Every step forward takes a certain amount of time. The longer you have the more value you can develop.

At 54 I would love to have South American Gold be my last stop. Naturally, I will always have to listen to an offer which is attractive to shareholders, but I would like to build this one."

The prize is to try and build a company with at least one and possibly three separate multimillion ounce deposits. "We have put together the acquisition criteria, basically driven by the strategy of the company and right now are building the foundation to execute it," says De Motte.

"We have already hired a mine engineer. So we've hedged development and potential near term production. We have a really strong team (See Management Section) and we waited and took our time in choosing the people.

Any business is problematic until you get further into a project but we feel by having the right people in place and the right consultants outside the company we are building now for a bright future. "

SAGD's Initial Santacruz Project

South American Gold Corp. is an early stage American junior mining company committed to high potential, under explored properties in Colombia's historic gold mining districts.

This historic gold district has been virtually unexplored by modern exploration techniques but historically was known to host gold deposits and production mainly by Spanish and English miners. Offering highly favorable geologic trends, the region has a number of small mines operating with outdated technology and the Department of Nariño is governed by a forward -looking pro-mining expansion government.

Currently SAGD controls one project, the Santacruz Gold Project in Guachaves, located in the department (state) of Nariño. The nearest airport is in the rural city of Pasto, overlooked by a volcano. The Santacruz Project encompasses over 4,500 acres across this legendary gold-rich area.

In '80 and '82 agencies of the Columbian and Japanese governments did some mapping and regional work trying to identify anomalies. A Japanese agency identified 36 multiple vein clusters, 16 of which are on the Santacruz Project. Gold mineralization at commercial grades was identified at the relatively shallow depth of 100 to 150 meters, which suggests low -cost open pit production potential.

One vein the Japanese sampled yielded 7 grams of gold per ton. Another sample came up with very decent poly metallic gold silver mineralization. Again theoretically find and put enough of these veins together you could be looking at a multimillion deposit.

Tantalizingly, most of the Santacruz property is still unexplored. Similar results concentrated in any newly discovered vein clusters could prove out to 2 to 3 million ounces of gold. With good mining characteristics and the potential for low cost bulk open pit production besides underground mines, Santacruz could turn out to be a big play. In terms of an opportunity in the underexplored part of Columbia to look at, Santacruz ranks up there with the best.

Red Light! The old studies are a good starting point but need to be confirmed by using new technology. The rest of the unexplored ground needs to be systematically gone through to identify the best prime drilling spots. The forest terrain overgrowth must be cleared with machetes to reach drilling targets.

Everything requires a lot of field work. Phase I exploration has already begun, which includes preliminary site-work, surveying, geologic mapping and sampling due to be concluded soon. The hope is to find new veins in places SAGD didn't know about and open pit opportunities. SAGD is doing inventory to confirm what SAGD thinks it knows from the old government agency studies and what today's observers think they can see on the ground.

The owner of the existing marginal underground El Diamante mine operating on Santacruz on a very small scale using antiquated machinery lets SAGD use it for a base camp. Modernizing El Diamante or one of the other numerous existing small mines in the area now operating with antiquated equipment is also a tantalizing possibility for early cash flow.

In his previous companies, De Motte has done similar things. De Motte really shines when he gets a property into production. Everywhere in his jeans and hard hat De Motte knows many of his key producing people by their first names and can inspire their loyalty.

Results from South American's Phase I exploration plan should be released this summer. Phase I includes preliminary site-work and surveying, geological mapping and geological sampling. Advance geochemical, geophysical work should establish preliminary drill targets.

Phase II, which naturally must be built upon Phase I results, will be an advanced $1.2 million exploration program with a 6,000 meter drill program costing $200 a meter. By the end of 2011 or in early 2012 investors could hopefully see South American's initial resource report NI 43-101. Phase II exploration should also be well underway on track to define the potential for establishing a multimillion ounce open pit or underground mine.

SAGD's Other Two Mining Opportunities De Motte has been insistent he wouldn't feel comfortable unless he had at least three projects because in mining anything can happen to just one. Why was he so confident he could identify new targets within the next 12 months? "We went to the least explored part of the greatest remaining gold play on the planet," De Motte replied. "We just see so many opportunities down there. We have the talent and we feel our company is scalable with the talent we've assembled."

A management team with extensive mining and capital markets expertise

Because SAGD is looking at underexplored neglected areas CEO Raymond De Motte has put together an experienced team which has previously distinguished themselves at larger mining concerns, especially in Latin America.

Raymond De Motte, 54, President and CEO has over 30 years of business experience starting off with the global giant Bechtel where his father was a high executive.

After developing global outlook and learning to do deals, DeMotte expected to spend his entire career there. In an unexpected economic downturn, he saw his own future there suddenly disappear. Although advised if he stayed things at Bechtel would ultimately turnaround, instead the impatient young man confidently started off on his own.

De Motte took over a company in mining which became his career. A few current SAGD investors became his fans after earlier making money from his previous efforts as CFO of Kimberly Gold or as CEO of Sterling Mining Company , which filed for bankruptcy after he left.

Among his best accomplishments are bringing two mining operations into production, raising over $50 million in equity financing and management of exploration, development and production in the U.S. and Mexico. De Motte is currently a director of two Canadian public companies, Silver Fields Resources and Westcan Uranium.

South American Gold is the major opportunity of his life to create new value for himself and his investors.

Camilo Velasquez, 32, CFO and Director, focuses on corporate development and finance. Previously he served as a senior financial analyst at Merck & Co. developing business planning processes and financial objectives. In 2007, he joined Sterling Mining Company as budget/financial analyst in Sterling's Mexico operations. He is a very impressive young man.

Francis Xavier Reinhold Delzer, P.E., 75, Vice President of Operations, has more than 40 years experience in Latin America. He has worked for top mining companies like Ariel Resources, Marcona Mining, Orinoco Mining, CIA Minera Industrial and Andes Copper Mining Company in the areas of production management and supervision of gold and base metal mines and also consulted for Sterling Mining. He is a former Fulbright Scholar.

Rene Von Boeck, geologist, 74, Vice President Exploration, brings more than 40 years of experience managing and supervising precious and base metal exploration projects in Bolivia, Ecuador, Peru and Mexico.

In the past he managed the multi-million -dollar -exploration -drilling program that led to the discovery and development of a major AG-Zn-Pb deposit in Southern Bolivia. He also worked for CEO Demotte at Sterling Mining.

Quinn Bastian, Director,served from 2005 to 2007 as Vice President of Finance for International Minerals Corporation, a Canadian mineral resource company.

From 2000 Bastian hasserved as an officer and director of a privately -held mining company and also operated his own consulting practice in general areas of accounting , business plans, financing, mergers, acquisitions and reengineering.

He began his career in public accounting with the firm that became KPMG and has over 40 years of experience in finance, accounting and senior management.

Beatriz Duque, Director, worked in the Columbia Ministry of Mines and Energy from April 2004 until November 2010 in a number of capacities including Director of Mines and Energy.

Ms Duque has a Civil Engineering degree from the University of Medellin and has completed postgraduate finance studies at Eafit University. She has served as a board member to a number of South American energy and engineering companies, including Empresa de Energia de Cundinamarca,

Central Hidroelectrica de Calda, Centrales Electricas del Norte de Santander, Electrificadora del Huila and Electrificadora del Quindio. During her tenure as Director of Mines, Ms Duque was instrumental in the development of policy and decrees related to mine health and safety.

Consultants- an established and experienced project support team in place in Columbia:

Dr. Stuart Redwood, PhD, geologist, 50,consultant,is a key member of SAGD's Advisory Board. He has over 30 years experience, including over 20 years all over Latin America including Bolivia, Brazil, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Guyana, Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama, Peru, and of course Columbia.

Formerly the chief geologist for AngloGoldSouthAmerica, now AnglogoldAshanti, the hottest explorer in Columbia, Redwood is credited with many discoveries in Latin America including in Columbia. He will be a key advisor as SAGD looks to identify, acquire and develop prospect gold deposits.

Importantly, Dr.Redwood has the capability to independently prepare a NR 43-101 qualified person resource report which will be an important step in initially determining the value of the Santacruz Project. A report from Dr. Redwood also should carry credibility.

Juan Carlos Benjumea, consultant, is the initial member of SAGD's Advisory Board. He is a business attorney based in Medellin with an international commercial practice assisting foreign companies developing and expanding operations in Columbia.

mick;

starting part 3 / very long desription.


mick

12/11/12 12:13 PM

#301555 RE: Penny Roger$ #301520

part three/part of company history; this is writer's respect to SAGD /\SAGD/12-10-12
writer Special Situation Newsletter #26 - July 8, 2011

mick chat to ceo yesterday!
this deal didn't workout due to mining changes in this area of claim!

Start-up South American Gold Corp. (SAGD.OB) offers an early bird adventure in going after three separate multi-million ounce gold plays in one of the least explored most promising gold development areas left on the planet.

Finance

As a development stage holding company, South American Gold has not generated any revenue because its initial Santacruz prospect is in the exploration, not development stage.

In a very difficult market for startups the good news is SAGD completed a private placement with all non U.S. investors last March. The bad news was SAGD hoped to raise $5 million but decided to settle for only $1.5 million to avoid excessive shareholder dilution because the offering price of each unit had to be halved.

Over 5.8 million units were bought at $0.25 where each unit contained a common share and a warrant to buy another share at $0.50. Options and warrants outstanding now total about 6.7 million units which could bring in another $3.5 million if exercised.

To conserve cash for developmental purposes, South American has stretched out paying for Kata's remaining interest in Santacruz by spreading another $3 million due in cash over 18 months.

Perhaps in response to the modest reception of the March private placement, SAGD bought its initial 25% of Kata for reduced terms of $1 million instead of $2 million plus one million shares of stock.

Since SAGD future payments will include $3 million in cash and 3 million additional shares of SAGD stock Kata's owners have every reason to cooperate the make the new enterprise successful.

Since De Motte has successfully listed his previous companies on various stock exchanges around the world, as SAGD matures he plans to seek dual listing of its stock. This hopefully will mean increased liquidity for investors and more visibility for SAGD.

Like any junior company not generating cash flow yet, SAGD will have to continuously go back to the markets to make the rest of its payments for its Santacruz interest.

Clearly, given the ambitious plans to develop this property into hopefully a multimillion oz deposit and also to make at least two other acquisitions, the company will need to raise millions more expansion funds as it goes along.

Raising at least another $3 million to $5 million over the next 12 to 18 months looks like a minimum.

Failure to raise capital in a timely fashion would set back development plans and could cause failure. Raising new capital at an unreasonably low price per share would cause excessive shareholder dilution.

Also, while there are numerous older small mines in the Santacruz Project area, SAGD must get its Santacruz property reclassified from the forest reserve to the mining category or it cannot be developed.

Fortunately, the presence of so many Columbian officials including Columbia's Minister of Mines and the Governor of the Department of Nariño in addition to two important Senators and the expressed desire of many other Columbian speakers at SAGD's Medellin March conference to see mining development and new jobs in this Nariño Department strongly increases the odds in favor of the needed reclassification.

Competition;

With increased safety, Colombia is experiencing a boom in mining investment, particularly in gold. As a result, the mining industry is becoming intensely competitive in all of its phases. Consequently, South American Gold Corp. faces strong competition from a growing number of companies which possess greater financial resources and personnel.

Major players include AngloGoldAshanti, Barrick, Greystar Resources and Rio Tinto. Competitors can also someday become buyers if the resources of the initial Santacruz property prove out after much more field work to be enticing enough to attract big buyers.

Because South American's strategy is to seek its first three acquisitions in areas which were formerly the most dangerous and least explored, they currently face less competition in their localities.

If the company is successful in locating multi-million oz gold resources, there will be no shortage of prospective acquirers, although current CEO Ray De Motte would prefer to develop SAGD as a standalone as long as is practical.



Risks

The depleted FARC still take refuge over the border in nearby Ecuador (as well as in Venezuela) to regroup and sometimes make shows of force. In a land where there is a vast gap between rich and poor the FARC remains hard to eliminate completely.

In some areas Columbian soldiers are more concerned about a new group of rebels without a cause. These modern daypirates sweep down to raid mines and steal processed gold before it is shipped.

Unlike so many gold start-ups, South American is fortunate to have an experienced management team and consultants in place who understand Columbia well.

The hope is the team will be able to move more efficiently not only on the Santacruz Project but in the other two acquisitions when they are finalized.

Aside from the risk every miner faces that discoveries can turn out to be less than anticipated, the major risk relates to the unpredictable direction of the volatile price of gold, recently around $1,544.

Remember the price of gold which has been generally going up, up, up, can just as quickly go down, down, down. Still with mining costs in Columbia, especially open pit mines, relatively low, the price of gold could fall to $1,000, which some majors use as their bottom target on which to base their internal projections or even to $600, and Columbian properties would still be economic.

The biggest generic risk normally in any little company like SAGD is the exploration risk. You do not always find what you expect when you start drilling.

Also capital markets windows for raising money can slam quickly closed without warning. If the price of gold went down sharply and much lower than experts believe possible, some potential new investors will lose their lust for gold and flee.

Above all, a start-up CEO must see their new enterprise does not run out of cash! The future is unknowable and anything can happen, including earthquakes. Still, veteran mining executive Ray De Motte and his team look like they have a good speculative shot at creating a big winner!

CONTACT INFORMATION

South American Gold Corp.

http://www.sagoldcorp.com

3645 East Main Street, Suite 119

Richmond, IN 47374

United States

Raymond De Motte, President
Phone: 1 (765) 356-9726

Fax: 1 (765) 356-9737

Email: info@sagoldcorp.com

Investor Relations

Atlanta Capital Partners, LLC

David Kugelman

Toll free 1 (888) 316-7549

Phone: 1 (404) 220-9950

Disclaimer and Safe Harbor Statements

==========================================================



[-chart]charts.stockscores.com/chart.asp?TickerSymbol=SAGD&TimeRange=180&Interval=d&Volume=1&ChartType=CandleStick&Stockscores=1&ChartWidth=830&ChartHeight=500&LogScale=None&Band=DC&avgType1=EMA&movAvg1=&avgType2=TMA&movAvg2=&Indicator1=MACD&Indicator2=StochRSI&Indicator3=SStoch&Indicator4=CVolatility&endDate=&CompareWith=[/chart]