CRP seeks more capital to rebuild
CRP seeks more capital to rebuild
Chatham Rock Phosphate is embarking on a new round of capital-raising for the shortfall of its earlier share issue.
CRP is seeking to raise $766,000. The shares are being marketed among wholesale investors, particularly within the farming community.
“This is an opportunity to invest in a green local phosphate source,” according to CRP managing director Chris Castle.
“CRP is now fund-raising as part of re-applying for an environmental consent. Assuming we receive this consent, we will quickly move towards production.” Mr Castle noted CRP has a 20-year mining permit.
Following the latest capital-raising among existing shareholders, interests associated with the directors and management are now CRP’s largest shareholders, with New Zealand farmers and hundreds of other Kiwis owning more than half the company.
Mr Castle said the offer is being marketed as an opportunity to own part of an independent local source of low cadmium, low carbon footprint rock phosphate.
“The money currently sought allows CRP to rebuild the
company over the next 12 months. A lot can happen in a year,
the history of this company makes that very
evident.”
CRP has undertaken an assessment of its
current market value and notes there is little downside
because CRP shares are already priced on the market’s
assumption that CRP will either not get the marine consent
on the second attempt or not be able to raise the funding to
reapply.
The market capitalisation post the consent decline settled at $3.7 million but has since drifted to $2.45 million (despite raising $713,000).
Mr Castle said entry into CRP at 0.6 cents a share values the company (post placement) at $2.76 million or an enterprise value of $1.4 million net of cash.
“That’s $2 million less than our market capitalisation in April 2010, when we had no management team as such, no contracts with Boskalis, no 20-year mining permit, no legislation for applying for a marine consent, significantly less knowledge about the deposit, no direct involvement or expertise in the phosphate market, and only $250,000 in the bank.
“Even without the environmental consent, or the certainly of gaining it, CRP’s market value has exceeded $40 million for almost all of the period September 2012 to February 2015.
Mr Castle said he is confident of a successful
outcome for the environmental permitting process next time,
due to:
• An expected improvement in the Marine
Consent procedure, including interpretation of the EEZ
Act
• CRP was turned down on limited and
unexpected grounds that we consider erroneous and can be
dealt with more robustly on resubmission, (high-profile
fishing industry and Iwi concerns were mutually agreed to be
groundless)
• CRP is confident of much wider and
tangibly expressed support from relevant government
agencies, the farming sector, and other stakeholders
•
The company more fully understands the rules of the game and
expects the Environmental Protection Authority to have
learned from the CRP and earlier Trans-Tasman Resources
applications.
Mr Castle said CRP’s core attributes
enabling it to make such significant progress since being
granted a prospecting permit in early 2010 include
CRP’s:
• proven ability to fund the company
from its inception ($33.5 million in five years starting
from a zero base)
• obtaining a 20-year mining
permit
• building an internationally recognised
project team
• developing unique intellectual
property
• on-going partnership with Boskalis
Offshore B.V.
He noted CRP has diversified with five
marine applications offshore Namibia, a developing
relationship with other key players (including locals) in
that market, and is undertaking due diligence on other
phosphate assets in multiple offshore locations. Qualifying
projects would be acquired using equity and executing such
acquisitions will be a focus later in 2015.
CRP is also
entering the phosphate trading market aimed at using the
existing management team and industry contacts to generate
cash flows prior to production from the Chatham Rise.
Finally CRP is proceeding with a listing on the TSX.V through a reverse takeover of Antipodes Gold, which will appeal to existing North American shareholders, and which will facilitate fundraising in Canada, the largest mineral-resources focused marketplace. A secondary listing in New Zealand would remain for local shareholders.
Profitability and Value
On 23 October 2014 we made a detailed market announcement regarding our anticipated project economics and cost structures, including detailing our underlying assumptions. This was updated in a further market announcement on 27 January 2015. Readers are referred to those announcements for more details and copies can be provided on request. While the assumptions remain applicable (and critically the assumption that we will obtain a marine consent) those economics are significantly influenced by prevailing foreign exchange rates. In particular, costs are largely expected to be incurred in Euros and income is largely expected to be earned in US dollars.
Based on current exchange rates and the aforementioned assumptions, CRP’s annual profit before royalties and taxation would exceed $96 million. New Zealand would benefit from CRP paying $34 million in annual taxes and royalties, plus millions in port charges. Jobs - many high value and knowledge-based - would be created in the port, on the mining ship, undertaking environmental monitoring and broader scientific research, in the agriculture and hospitality sectors and on the Chatham Islands.
ENDS