Junior miners jump into medical marijuana, food service amid slump

VIANARCHRIS

Well-Known Member
By Euan Rocha, Nicole Mordant and Jim Regan (Australia)

TORONTO/VANCOUVER/SYDNEY (Reuters) - Many of the world's junior miners are laying down their picks and shovels to start new ventures ranging from egg exporting to medical marijuana farming, as they as try to survive a crash in metals prices by shifting away from exploration.

Prices for copper, gold, iron ore, coal and almost every other metal have collapsed, stalling exploration work and hitting early stage miners particularly hard. These firms typically find the deposits that larger miners often then go on to acquire and develop into mines. But there's scant demand for new sources of metal now.

Pivoting into other businesses has happened during mining funks in the past, including a spate of defections into the tech sector during the dotcom boom in the late 1990s. But now the concern is that when prices eventually do rebound, there will be fewer junior miners, and a reduced pool of new mine prospects.

"No one has any interest in a grassroots exploration project right now," said Yari Nieken, chief executive of Chlormet Technologies , which has bought an e-cigarette company and has a license to grow medical marijuana pending.

Canada made it legal to buy marijuana from licensed producers with a doctor's prescription in 2014. Regulator Health Canada estimates that the Canadian medical marijuana industry will reach C$1.3 billion (US$987 million) in a decade.

Canada's Century Iron Mines , whose mining projects are backed by two major Chinese companies, Minmetals and Wuhan Iron and Steel Corp (WISCO), owns development stage iron ore assets in eastern Canada. In July, Century started a new independent venture to distribute Australian eggs in Hong Kong, Macau, and potentially mainland China.

Century aims to piggyback on Australia's move from a reliance on mineral exports to shipping food and agricultural products to a growing Asian middle class.

"Due to the downturn in commodity prices, Australia's moving its focus from mining to dining," said Century CEO Sandy Chim. "We're just an exploration company, but we have a solid balance sheet, and we feel we can also do the same.

"We see a good opportunity to start a small, but meaningful food distribution business that can capitalize on our network in China."

The shift to egg distribution will help create a cash flow generating business until iron ore prices recover, Chim said. While Century isn't turning its back on mining, it's considering buying food production assets, such as fisheries, while it waits for the sector to rebound.

This business shift by miners is most visible in Canada, home to the majority of the world's publicly-listed miners, but is also seen in other mining centers like Australia and Brazil.

ABANDONING SHIP

Century may be able to ride out the cycle, but some of its smaller peers both in Canada and overseas have begun to abandon the mining sector altogether, as it becomes increasingly difficult to raise financing.

In January, Brazil's All Ore Mineração SA decided to end its commodities operations and enter the cosmetics and hair-care markets by buying Sweet Distribuidora, also known as SweetHair, in an all-share, no-cash deal. The new company, renamed Sweet Cosméticos , hopes to sell beauty products developed using biotechnology and nanotechnology.

In March, TSX Venture-listed Sabre Graphite bought DraftTeam, a website offering fantasy sports games. It has since changed its name to DraftTeam Daily Fantasy Sports Corp . Australia's Erin Resources , which was previously exploring for gold in Senegal, has ventured into the medical marijuana business.

Supreme Pharmaceuticals Inc , formerly a copper and gold explorer with projects in western Canada, is also seeking a license to grow medical marijuana in Canada and has bought a greenhouse facility in Ontario.

"With the downturn that the mining industry has suffered, I think the smart and innovative entrepreneurs in the sector are looking for other asset types that can rebuild businesses and restore lost value for shareholders," said John Fowler, Supreme's Chief Executive.

Australian-listed International Goldfields , which is investing in medical marijuana assets overseas, has seen more trading activity in its stock since it moved away from mining, according to director David Tasker. The shares trade for less than a cent each.

The company said its gold investment in Brazil and joint venture in the U.S. were offering limited value to its shareholders.

"Also, the level of support we could expect from the capital markets was very, very minimal, if not all together non-existent," Tasker said. “Once that reality dawned, it was incumbent on us to look for alternatives."

The hundreds of largely TSX Venture-listed exploration companies have been among the hardest hit in the current downturn, as investors have fled the sector due to prolonged decline in metal prices. Those tough conditions also mean that, cash-strapped larger rivals aren't willing to invest in new projects.

Some institutional and retail investors, while dismayed by the collapse in exploration company values, are sanguine about the shift away from mining.

"I didn't buy this stock thinking I was investing in the egg distribution, but I've no problem with them doing other things," said Ian Morrison, a retail investor who owns more than 500,000 shares in Century, the iron ore miner turned egg distributor.

"I look forward to seeing what their next move will be because I do not think they are putting everything they have got into Aussie eggs."

(Additional reporting by Jeb Blount in Rio de Janeiro and Susan Taylor in Toronto, editing by Amran Abocar and John Pickering)
 

torontomeds

Well-Known Member
At this point I am just so disgusted at what has happened in the Cannabis community.
Talk about PTSD from an all out RAPE of our community, I was actually thinking about becoming an LP spent over a year on an application even bought property, then at a cretin point I just said fuck it and decided not to go forward with it.

Two main reasons why was

#1 HC was clearly dragging feet on this program, and it was clear not too far into it that something was wrong, how is one of the first companies approved a company who has serious ties to a Cannabis seed breeding and selling company?
When I asked someone about it who was close to the company they told me that the RCMP gave them a 1 year probation period(what ever that means) to enter the MMPR even though they had sold seeds in the past.

Then at the same time I have friends who have apps in and have been in some sort of waiting period from the start, I know some people have been told to build only to not be approved to grow, others are still in clearance stag, none of this makes any sense to me.

#2 my other reason was at the same time that all of the above was going on, I would go to some of the green-rush type events to meet and get familiar with the players in this potential new industry and lets just say 98% of the people I met did not impress me one bit.
From what I could tell it was a lot of ass hole dickhead types with big money, big mouths, and tiny brains, it seemed to me you had a lot of big money guys that would have one guy in their circle who know a bit about Cannabis and they would all act like they had something soooo special. Truly a snake oil circle jerk. (must be using the oil for lube)

Anyways I am kind of disappointed with the whole system up here at this time, I truly hope that HC has to allow personal grows for patients who have the ability to do so, this would make this industry not so lucrative to big money.

At the end of the day we all need to come back to earth, this is a GOD/Nature given plant to us, it was a gift just like everything around us that is natural, this plant and its users need to not be treated like some sort of plague or burden to society, enough is enough, the only reason all the vultures are attracted to this plant is because of the legal status of this plant, take that away get ride of the vulture.

Enough with the BS from both sides, you have gangsters with one motive, you have big money with a similar motive, you have hippies turned capitalists, it is a fucking joke, I am sick of people at event talking about quality control and sanitation bla bla bla, yo in nature for 1000's of years shit was fine now all of a sudden you want to treat it like something that it is not, Arughh.

OK I am done ranting, anyways the point of my rant was to say FUCK all you assholes jumping on the weed band wagon, If you have not had personal experience with Cannabis for at least 10 years I do not want to hear from you.

I know a lot of people myself included who have been charged, or worse put in jail for Cannabis related offenses only and that is fucked up to now have an industry based off of our struggles.
I suggest all you big money guys go out and help the avg teenager who is getting a simple possession charge, pay for a lawyer for them and help them beat the charge so it does not mess up their life, why not go and do some of that before you try to mine millions off of us.
 

The Hippy

Well-Known Member
Yup we think pretty much alike. I hate to sound like a know it all, but I knew this was all going to happen before it did. It wasn't hard to see what was going to happen to Doctors being harder to find.
It was all plain as day to me. High prices. Unfair access to patients and those wanting in on the ground floor to become an LP
It's a shit show, and unfortunately it's in one guys hands right now.
Nice disaster you created harpo.......please jail this bastard
 
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