Amur Minerals — Recovery abounds

Amur Minerals (LN: AMC)

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Research: Metals & Mining

Amur Minerals — Recovery abounds

On 10 February, Amur announced a 50kt (or 6.8%) headline increase in contained resource nickel tonnes, but a 214kt (or 41.7%) underlying increase (ie at a constant cut-off grade). This follows the January announcement of metallurgical test results by Gipronickel on a c half tonne sample of ore from Maly Kurumkon-Flangovy. Over seven metals, average recoveries were 13.0% higher than those derived from earlier bench-scale tests. The results represent the first production-scale test work from the Kun-Manie licence area and, owing to their larger size, are expected to be more reflective of actual production processes.

Lord Ashbourne

Written by

Lord Ashbourne

Director of Content, Mining

Metals & Mining

Amur Minerals

Recovery abounds

Gipronickel met test results & resource update

Metals & mining

7 March 2017

Price

8.94p

Market cap

£53m

US$1.2277/£

Net cash (US$m) at 30 June 2016

11.5

Shares in issue

594.4m

Free float

80%

Code

AMC

Primary exchange

AIM

Secondary exchange

N/A

Share price performance

%

1m

3m

12m

Abs

(23.1)

(32.5)

14.6

Rel (local)

(25.0)

(37.7)

(2.4)

52-week high/low

15.2p

2.4p

Business description

Amur Minerals is an exploration and development company focused on base metal projects in Russia’s Far East. The company’s principal asset is the Kun-Manie nickel sulphide deposit in the Amur Oblast, comprising almost a million tonnes of contained nickel equivalent in at least five deposits.

Next events

Road desktop study

H117

Analyst

Charles Gibson

+44 (0)20 3077 5724

Amur Minerals is a research client of Edison Investment Research Limited

On 10 February, Amur announced a 50kt (or 6.8%) headline increase in contained resource nickel tonnes, but a 214kt (or 41.7%) underlying increase (ie at a constant cut-off grade). This follows the January announcement of metallurgical test results by Gipronickel on a c half tonne sample of ore from Maly Kurumkon-Flangovy. Over seven metals, average recoveries were 13.0% higher than those derived from earlier bench-scale tests. The results represent the first production-scale test work from the Kun-Manie licence area and, owing to their larger size, are expected to be more reflective of actual production processes.

Year
end

Revenue ($m)

PBT*
($m)

EPS*
(c)

DPS
(c)

P/E
(x)

Yield
(%)

12/14

0.0

(2.5)

(0.6)

0.0

N/A

N/A

12/15

0.0

(1.9)

(0.4)

0.0

N/A

N/A

12/16e

0.0

(4.0)

(0.8)

0.0

N/A

N/A

12/17e

0.0

(4.0)

(0.3)

0.0

N/A

N/A

Note: *PBT and EPS are normalised, excluding amortisation of acquired intangibles, exceptional items and share-based payments.

Resource now >1Mt contained Ni (9.3Moz AuE)

Based on our end-FY16 cash estimate, we calculate an enterprise value for Amur of US$56.3m, which equates to US$73.47 per total nickel resource tonne. That being the case, a headline resource increase of 50.0kt Ni should have added US$3.7m in (pro rata) value to Amur, while a like-for-like increase of 213.7kt should have added US$15.7m – cf an estimated cost of drilling of c US$1.3m.

Positive results follow earlier mining optimisation

The Gipronickel results follow the conclusion of a trade-off study by Runge Pincock Minarco (RPM) in December 2016, which was designed to optimise returns according to whether ore blocks are mined by open pit or underground methods. In this case, compared to an earlier expectation of approximately 50:50 open pit:underground mining, the study determined an economically optimum return from approximately 25:75 open pit:underground and therefore suggests a material reconfiguration of the mine plan compared to the operational blueprint of 2015.

Valuation: Increases by 34.5-61.3% to 39-51c

Edison’s forecasts and valuations are necessarily still based on Amur’s 2015 operational blueprint. Fully diluted at the current share price of 8.99p, we estimate updated valuations of the concentrate, low-grade matte, high-grade matte and refined metal options for Kun-Manie of 39c, 51c, 41c and 50c, respectively (vs 29c, 34c, 26c and 31c, previously), using a 10% discount rate and at our long-term nickel price of US$22,355/t (assuming 80:20 debt:equity funding). However, Amur estimates that the results of Gipronickel’s metallurgical test work alone could result in revenues being “increased by as much as 10% for nickel and 6% for copper”, which adds between 20.0% (for the refined metal option) and 33.3% (for the concentrate option) to the above numbers. Stated alternatively, assuming equity dilution at the current share price, Amur’s shares offer investors post-dilution internal rates of return of 30.7-36.6% over 17 years in US dollar terms.

Mineral resource estimate upgrade

Amur had a record field season in 2016, drilling 80 holes of 19,400.8m in aggregate length compared to a target of 15,000m. In so doing, the company confirmed the presence of continuous mineralisation along a 3,000m strike length at MKFL (cf 2,100m previously). Of the 59 (15,213.3m) resource definition holes, those intersecting ore grade mineralisation recorded an average mineralised thickness of 13.5m per interval, an average cumulative thickness of 23.6m per hole and an average length weighted grade of 0.76% Ni and 0.21% Cu (using a 0.2% nickel cut-off grade). In addition, the previously identified high grade structure (defined as >0.5% Ni) has been confirmed to exist along the entire 3,000m strike length of MKFL, with an average mineralised thickness of 10.5m per interval, an average cumulative thickness of 19.7m per hole and an average length weighted grade of 0.90% Ni and 0.25% Cu.

Of note is the fact that the headline grades of the holes drilled during the 2016 field season were higher both on average and specifically within the high grade domain than those recorded in the Kun-Manie May 2016 resource estimate. Cumulative widths in excess of 20m in the western extension of MKFL also compare with widths of c 12m elsewhere in the deposit. All MKFL drill identified mineralisation has now been conducted at a spacing deemed by SRK to be suitable for the definition of indicated resources.

On 10 February, Amur announced an updated mineral resource estimate, as compiled by consultants RPM. Unlike the previous resource estimate, dating from May 2016, which was calculated at a cut-off grade of 0% nickel, the new resource estimate was calculated at a cut-off grade of 0.4% Ni. As a result, sub-economic mineralisation is no longer included in the global resource inventory. A comparison between the January 2017 mineral resource estimate (at a cut-off grade of 0.4% Ni) and the May 2016 mineral resource (at a cut-off grade of 0% Ni) is as follows:

Exhibit 1: Kun-Manie mineral resource estimate, January 2017 vs May 2016 (0.4% cut-off grade, excluding Gorny)

January 2017 mineral resource estimate

Change vs May 2016 mineral resource estimate (units)*

Orebody

Tonnage

(Mt)

Ni

(%)

Ni

(t)

Cu

(%)

Cu

(t)

Co

(%)

Co

(t)

Pt

(g/t)

Pt

(t)

Pd

(g/t)

Pd

(t)

Tonnage

(Mt)

Ni

(%)

Ni

(t)

Cu

(%)

Cu

(t)

Co

(%)

Co

(t)

Pt

(g/t)

Pt

(t)

Pd

(g/t)

Pd

(t)

Kubuk

Measured

0.0

0.00

0

0.00

0

0.000

0

0.00

0.0

0.00

0.0

0.0

0.00

0

0.00

0

0.000

0

0.00

0.0

0.00

0.0

Indicated

3.6

0.87

31,320

0.21

7,560

0.016

576

0.18

0.6

0.19

0.7

-0.1

0.11

2,820

0.03

260

0.016

576

-0.02

-0.1

0.00

0.0

Total M&I

3.6

0.87

31,320

0.21

7,560

0.016

576

0.18

0.6

0.19

0.7

-0.1

0.11

2,820

0.02

260

0.016

576

-0.02

-0.1

0.00

0.0

Inferred

10.9

0.74

80,660

0.20

21,800

0.015

1,635

0.16

1.7

0.14

1.5

-11.1

0.28

-23,840

0.05

-10,300

0.015

1,635

0.02

-1.3

0.02

-1.2

Total

14.5

0.77

111,980

0.20

29,360

0.015

2,211

0.16

2.4

0.15

2.2

-11.2

0.25

-21,020

0.05

-10,040

0.015

2,211

0.02

-1.4

0.02

-1.2

Ikenskoe

Measured

10.1

0.66

66,660

0.18

18,180

0.011

1,111

0.21

2.1

0.25

2.5

-7.4

0.15

-21,940

0.04

-6,020

0.011

1,111

0.03

-1.0

0.06

-0.9

Indicated

6.3

0.61

38,430

0.14

8,820

0.011

693

0.20

1.3

0.25

1.6

-5.5

0.22

-7,570

0.04

-2,580

0.011

693

0.06

-0.4

0.09

-0.4

Total M&I

16.4

0.64

105,090

0.16

27,000

0.011

1,804

0.21

3.4

0.25

4.1

-13.0

0.18

-29,610

0.04

-8,600

0.011

1,804

0.04

-1.5

0.06

-1.4

Inferred

4.7

0.84

39,480

0.20

9,400

0.016

752

0.19

0.9

0.23

1.1

-1.2

0.06

-6,620

0.01

-2,000

0.016

752

0.00

-0.2

0.03

-0.1

Total

21.1

0.69

144,570

0.17

36,400

0.012

2,556

0.20

4.3

0.25

5.2

-14.2

0.17

-36,230

0.04

-10,700

0.012

2,556

0.03

-1.6

0.06

-1.5

Vodorazdelny

Measured

0.6

0.74

4,440

0.22

1,320

0.012

72

0.29

0.2

0.32

0.2

-0.2

0.17

-260

0.05

-80

0.012

72

-0.01

0.0

0.02

0.0

Indicated

3.2

0.85

27,200

0.21

6,720

0.017

544

0.16

0.5

0.16

0.5

-1.6

0.19

-4,000

0.04

-1,480

0.017

544

0.06

-0.1

0.06

-0.1

Total M&I

3.8

0.83

31,640

0.21

8,040

0.016

616

0.18

0.7

0.19

0.7

-1.8

0.19

-4,260

0.04

-1,560

0.016

616

0.04

-0.1

0.04

-0.1

Inferred

1.0

0.81

8,100

0.22

2,200

0.016

160

0.17

0.2

0.16

0.2

1.0

0.81

8,100

0.22

2,200

0.016

160

0.17

0.2

0.16

0.2

Total

4.8

0.83

39,740

0.21

10,240

0.016

776

0.18

0.9

0.18

0.9

-0.8

0.19

3,840

0.04

640

0.016

776

0.04

0.1

0.04

0.1

Maly Kurumkon

Measured

0.0

0.00

0

0.00

0

0.000

0

0.00

0.0

0.00

0.0

0.0

0.00

0

0.00

0

0.000

0

0.00

0.0

0.00

0.0

Indicated

57.5

0.77

442,750

0.22

126,500

0.015

8,625

0.15

8.6

0.16

9.2

-10.9

0.35

157,550

0.10

42,300

0.015

8,625

0.05

2.0

0.06

2.3

Total M&I

57.5

0.77

442,750

0.22

126,500

0.015

8,625

0.15

8.6

0.16

9.2

-10.9

0.35

157,550

0.10

42,300

0.015

8,625

0.05

2.0

0.06

2.3

Inferred

3.4

0.80

27,200

0.22

7,480

0.017

578

0.16

0.5

0.15

0.5

-18.8

0.43

-54,200

0.10

-18,120

0.017

578

0.06

-1.4

0.05

-1.5

Total

60.9

0.77

469,950

0.22

133,980

0.015

9,203

0.15

9.2

0.16

9.7

-29.7

0.37

103,350

0.10

24,180

0.015

9,203

0.06

0.7

0.06

0.8

Total measured

10.7

0.66

71,100

0.18

19,500

0.011

1,183

0.21

2.3

0.25

2.7

-7.6

0.15

-22,200

0.04

-6,100

0.011

1,183

0.03

-1.1

0.05

-1.0

Total indicated

70.6

0.76

539,700

0.21

149,600

0.015

10,438

0.16

11.0

0.17

12.0

-18.1

0.32

148,800

0.10

38,500

0.015

10,438

0.05

1.5

0.05

1.7

Total M&I

81.3

0.75

610,800

0.21

169,100

0.014

11,621

0.16

13.3

0.18

14.7

-25.7

0.30

126,700

0.08

32,500

0.014

11,621

0.04

0.3

0.05

0.7

Total inferred

20.0

0.78

155,440

0.20

40,880

0.016

3,125

0.17

3.4

0.16

3.3

-30.1

0.21

-76,560

0.04

-28,320

0.016

3,125

0.05

-2.7

0.05

-2.6

Grand total

101.3

0.76

766,240

0.21

209,980

0.015

14,746

0.16

16.7

0.18

18.0

-55.8

0.28

50,040

0.07

4,080

0.015

14,746

0.04

-2.4

0.05

-1.9

Source: Amur Minerals, Edison Investment Research. Note: *Totals compare to May 2016 mineral resource estimate reconfigured to exclude Gorny; M&I = Measured and Indicated. Totals may not add up owing to rounding.

Of note, within this context, is the material increase in the resource at Maly Kurumkon, as a result of the exploration conducted during the 2016 field season and despite the increase in the cut-off grade. This contrasts with three other deposits (Vodorazdelny, Ikenskoe and Kubuk), at which no additional drilling has been conducted since May 2016 and at which the changes in resources therefore only reflected a recalculation based on a higher cut-off grade. As expected, in these cases, the higher cut-off grade resulted in a decline in the overall ore tonnage, an increase in the in-situ grade of nickel and a proportionately smaller decline in the number of contained nickel tonnes. One interpretation of the 2016 field season therefore is that it has more than replaced hitherto sub-economic resources with economic ones. Note that no recalculation was performed at Gorny, which is a relatively small deposit and the only one with an average grade below the 0.4% cut-off grade at the time of the H116 mineral resource estimate. As a result, Gorny has been excluded from the above table, although future drilling may result in its re-inclusion once again, at a later date.

Nevertheless, direct comparison may be made between three deposits, for which a range of resource estimates were provided at varying cut-off grades (including 0.4% Ni) in Q216:

Exhibit 2: Total resource increase, by area, constant 0.4% cut-off grade

January 2017 total resource

Change vs May 2016 (units)

Change vs May 2016 (%)

Tonnage

(Mt)

Grade Ni

(%)

Contained Ni

(t)

Tonnage

(Mt)

Grade Ni

(%)

Contained Ni

(t)

Tonnage

(%)

Grade Ni

(%)

Contained Ni

(%)

Kubuk

14.5

0.77

111,980

1.0

0.06

16,480

7.4

8.8

17.3

Ikenskoe

21.1

0.69

144,570

3.4

-0.12

1,970

19.2

-15.4

1.4

Maly Kurumkon

60.9

0.77

469,950

27.9

-0.06

195,250

84.5

-7.0

71.1

Sub-total

96.5

0.75

726,500

32.3

-0.05

213,700

50.3

-5.7

41.7

Source: Amur Minerals, Edison Investment Research

As such, whereas the headline increase in resources (Exhibit 1) is 50,040t (+6.8% including Gorny or +10.3% excluding Gorny from May 2016 estimate) of contained nickel, compared to the previous resource, once the change in cut-off grades is taken into account, the underlying like-for-like change is 213,700t, or 41.7%, of contained nickel. Of note, once again, is the disproportionate increase in the resource at Maly Kurumkon on account of the exploration work performed in 2016, compared to the three other deposits, as a result of which it now comprises 61% of the Kun-Manie resource (cf 50% previously):

Exhibit 3: Kun-Manie resource by area, January 2017

Exhibit 4: Kun-Manie resource by area, May 2016

Source: Amur Minerals, Edison Investment Research

Source: Amur Minerals, Edison Investment Research

Exhibit 3: Kun-Manie resource by area, January 2017

Source: Amur Minerals, Edison Investment Research

Exhibit 4: Kun-Manie resource by area, May 2016

Source: Amur Minerals, Edison Investment Research

In nickel and gold (as an illustrative exercise) equivalent, Amur’s total mineral resource can therefore be stated as follows (at prevailing metals’ prices at the time of writing):

Exhibit 5: Kun-Manie total mineral resource estimate, nickel and gold equivalent

Tonnage (Mt)

Grade

Contained metal

Nickel equivalent

101.3

1.03% NiE

1.0Mt

Gold equivalent

101.3

2.86g/t AuE

9.3Moz

Source: Edison Investment Research, Amur Minerals

Based on our end-FY16 cash estimate, Edison estimates an enterprise value for Amur of US$56.3m, which equates to US$73.47 per total nickel resource tonne. That being the case, a headline resource increase of 50.0kt Ni should have added US$3.7m in (pro rata) value to Amur, while a like-for-like increase of 213.7kt should have added US$15.7m – compared to an estimated cost of the associated drilling of c US$1.3m (being 15,213.3m of resource definition drilling at management’s all-in estimate of drilling costs of US$75-100 per metre drilled).

The forthcoming 2017 field season

After a 2016 field season focused on MKFL, Amur is now targeting Kubuk in the forthcoming 2017 field season. The existing Kubuk resource is contained within a 1km strike length.

Exhibit 6: The five currently defined exploration areas at Kun-Manie

Source: Amur Minerals

Currently, 10,000m of drilling is planned in the area of the existing resource to upgrade a 10.9Mt inferred resource block into the indicated category (similar to MKFL drilling in the 2016 field season). The inferred block is currently the largest single continuous block of inferred resources within Kun-Manie and will account for c 6,000m of (in-fill) drilling by the company’s LF90 drill rig working at depths typically exceeding 200m. In addition, a minimum of seven metallurgical holes are planned, totalling a further 1,500-2,000m. The remaining c 1,000m will then be conducted as 1) step-out drilling over an additional 1km of strike length extension to the east of the existing resource and 2) to the west of the existing resource area in the 3km gap between Ikenskoe-Sobolevsky and Kubuk in an initiative to prove continuity between the two. NB In the event of continuity, this is likely to prove the deepest part of the orebody within Amur’s licence area.

A total of 5,000m of drilling are also planned for Amur’s LF70 drill rig at Ikenskoe-Sobolevsky (where holes are typically shallower – eg less than 200m). Approximately 2,000-2,500m is planned for completion on the Sobolevsky part of the deposit, located to the south and east of the currently defined drill identified mineralisation, with the objective of expanding the resource in the direction of Kubuk. As at Kubuk, additional drilling will also be completed to generate a metallurgical sample for this deposit.

Beyond the availability of water from the Maya River, Amur plans to complete six to eight holes to establish potential sources of groundwater for industrial use to process the ore. Finally, drilling will also be completed at Maly Kurumkon-Flangovy to establish potential water inflow rates within the planned open pits and underground operations in order to establish dewatering requirements for the mine.

Inevitably, the amount of drilling completed will be weather dependent. Typically, c 15,000m of drilling can be completed by two drill rigs in four to five months. However, sufficient supplies have been procured to support 20,000m of drilling, should the opportunity for an extended season present itself. Additional equipment purchased to facilitate the completion of work necessary for the ongoing development of Kun-Manie includes a 25t truck mounted crane, a Caterpillar 320D2L excavator, a Caterpillar D6RII bulldozer, a water well drilling truck, Ural trucks (for fuel, drop side loading and personnel transport), portable cabins, drill water pumps and additional power generators at cost of c US$1.04m.

At an average cost of US$40/m for drilling alone, this 15,000m programme is anticipated to have a total direct cost of c US$0.6m.

The 2017 field season is anticipated to conclude the major period of Amur’s exploration activity. In due course, Amur intends to explore the 900m gap between the MKFL and Gorny ore-bodies (of which 400m lies on the easternmost side of the MKFL area and 500m lies within the Gorny area). If drilling of these extensions proves successful (ie intersects mineralisation), Amur believes that it is possible that the MKFL and Gorny deposits will prove to be one larger deposit with a strike length of up to 5km.

Met test work, trade-off studies and exploration

On 11 January, Amur announced the results of Gipronickel’s metallurgical test programme on a c half tonne sample of ore derived from half core from three drill holes located within the Maly Kurumkon-Flangovy (MKFL) deposit, which comprises the majority (55% by ore tonnage) of its Kun-Manie production licence area.

Summary metallurgical test work results

The Gipronickel results represent the first production scale test work from the Kun-Manie licence area and, owing to their larger size, are expected to be more reflective of the actual production process than those calculated in bench-scale tests previously conducted by SGS. Flotation test work on the sulphide ores by SGS was concluded on 12 samples covering six incremental grade ranges distributed throughout the JORC-drilled areas of MKFL and Kubuk. The results of these tests were released to the market in August 2016 and are summarised in Exhibit 7, below, for an average 0.7% nickel grade and are compared to the Gipronickel results for the half tonne bulk sample (actually 443.9kg), which had an actual nickel grade of 0.7% nickel.

Exhibit 7: MKFL metallurgical recovery comparison, Gipronickel vs SGS (%)

Recovery (%)

Nickel

Copper

Cobalt

Platinum

Palladium

Silver

Gold

SGS (average recovery at 0.7% Ni grade)

69.2

77.9

53.3

49.5

58.3

49.5

53.4

Gipronickel (0.7% Ni grade)

80.6

83.8

61.4

59.6

82.3

70.5

63.7

Difference (percentage points)

+11.4

+5.9

+8.1

+10.1

+24.0

+21.0

+10.3

Source: Amur Minerals, Edison Investment Research

In addition to issues of comparability with SGS’s result, the 0.7% Ni grade of the half tonne sample also approximates the 0.75% Ni average grade of the mineable reserve calculated by RPM in its open pit/underground production trade-off study. Notwithstanding its larger size, recoveries from the Gipronickel half tonne sample are self-evidently materially higher than the results achieved by SGS (see Exhibit 7). In part, this may be attributed to the fact that the SGS test work involved coarse pulverisation of the samples and included older material that is likely to have partially oxidised, resulting in lower recoveries. In addition, however, Gipronickel employed a two-stage grinding process such that, after initial grinding and concentrate generation, the reject stream was reground to allow for the recovery of a second concentrate.

Mass-pull considerations

Gipronickel will progress its analysis of the metallurgical characteristics of the Kun-Manie ore bodies via the processing of a 7.5t bulk sample recovered in the 2016 drill programme, which is currently inventoried in Amur’s core and storage sample facility in Khabarovsk. In the meantime, the Gipronickel results also indicate a higher recovery to concentrate than previously calculated and higher concentrate grades of 8.58% Ni and 2.10% Cu. An improved mass-pull of 6.6% (vs 7.0% previously) implies the production of 394kt of concentrate on average per annum from 6.0Mt of ore, compared to 420kt previously and a consequent reduction in fleet transport and in capex (eg via a smaller concentrate treatment facility) in the event that Amur opts for a toll smelting development option. Further capex savings (eg via the requirement for a smaller flash furnace) are also possible in the event that Amur opts for a matte or refinery development option.

RPM open pit/underground production trade-off study

Amur’s metallurgical test work announcement follows the release of the results of a trade-off study between open pit and underground mining, conducted by RPM in late December, which identified a potential mineable reserve of 44.5Mt of ore at grades of 0.75% Ni and 0.19% Cu at MKFL (cf a mineable reserve of 45.5Mt identified in Amur’s preliminary economic assessment (PEA), at an average grade of 0.53% Ni and 0.15% Cu). Key differences between the RPM study and the original PEA are a materially higher underground component of the overall mining operation and also materially higher grades overall, as shown below:

Exhibit 8: RPM mining trade-off study results cf original PEA

Area

Parameter

RPM study

PEA

Change

(units)

Change

(%)

Underground

Ore (Mt)

31.7

28.1

3.6

12.8

Ni grade (%)

0.79

0.49

0.30

61.2

Cu grade (%)

0.19

0.15

0.04

26.7

Open pit

Ore (Mt)

12.85

17.4

-4.55

-26.1

Ni grade (%)

0.63

0.59

0.04

6.8

Cu grade (%)

0.18

0.16

0.02

12.5

Total

Ore (Mt)

44.5

45.5

-1.0

-2.2

Ni grade (%)

0.75

0.53

0.22

41.5

Cu grade (%)

0.19

0.15

0.04

26.7

Contained Ni (kt)

332.2

241.0

91.2

37.8

Contained Cu (kt)

83.5

69.3

14.2

20.4

Waste

43.7

47.3

-3.6

-7.6

Strip

3.40

2.73

0.67

24.5

Ni to conc (kt)

251.7

192.8

58.9

30.5

Cu to conc (kt)

65.4

62.4

3.0

4.8

Source: Amur Minerals, Edison Investment Research

The RPM study assumes that the nickel and copper are together recovered into an aggregate 2.5Mt of concentrate (ie a 5.6% mass-pull) containing an average of 9.9% Ni and 2.9% Cu (ie based on SGS, rather than Gipronickel, grade-recovery curves, above). In addition, the RPM study may prove conservative in that it assumes Western Australian underground mining costs, contributing to a total operating cost of US$40.02 per ore tonne. It also did not include the results of 2016 field season considered above.

Implications

Amur’s continuing focus on the high-grade domains within the ore-body in conjunction with the results of the RPM mining trade-off study, in particular, are changing management’s perception of the likely mining outcome at Kun-Manie, with an increasing focus on underground operations. Where before Kubuk has been presumed to support both open pit and underground operations, it is now increasingly presumed to be predominantly open pit (although there could be a small, start-up open pit) with the result that the mine plan is evolving from the 50:50 underground:open pit operation envisaged in the most recent operational blueprint (on which Edison’s valuations are based) into something closer to a 75:25 production split. Even this may understate the extent of ultimate underground mining, given that reserves are calculated with reference to Australian underground mining costs, which could prove to be in the order of 100% higher than Russian ones. Using the 0.4% cut-off grade and a metallurgical recovery of 80%, Amur now projects the break-even price of nickel for Kun-Manie to be US$3.40/lb based on Russian mining costs and US$5.70/lb based on Australian mining costs (cf a price of US$5.03/lb Ni at the time of writing).

Capex

In addition to the mine plan, capex estimates relating to the project are also continuing to evolve. Amur has recently completed a survey of the terrain to be covered by the proposed access road to site, for example, including identifying sources of gravel and bridge locations. Notable developments in this respect are reported to be that it may be possible to utilise existing (albeit primitive) logging roads for part of the distance. In addition, initial indications are that the average cost of the road is likely to be in the order of US$400,000 per kilometre in mountainous regions and c US$150,000 per kilometre in other areas – both of which are substantially less than the company’s currently budgeted US$1m per kilometre. Although the precise savings cannot be established in the absence of specific and detailed road design, Amur does nevertheless anticipate a substantial reduction in this capital cost category with a significant portion of the decrease being attributable to the c 50% devaluation of the Russian rouble since the compilation of the original estimate. Note that Amur is currently compiling detailed topographic maps along the entire planned road route for use in the commissioning of a desktop study to develop more accurate costings in respect of its construction, prior to ‘walking the course’ as soon as the spring thaw sets in.

Funding

At the same time as advancing the technical aspects of the project, Amur has been cultivating its relationships with parastatal and banking organisation. These include:

In March 2016, Amur signed a non-binding Heads of Terms with the Russian government’s Far East & Baikal Development Fund to advance discussions regarding state financing for infrastructure needs, primarily the 320km long road from the Ulak rail terminal on the BAM railway to the Kun-Manie site and the 15-50km power line extension to alternative planned furnace smelter sites for treatment of the sulphide concentrate. Additionally the fund has expressed a broader interest in financing additional project requirements, such as the DFS. This development follows an earlier mandate, signed between the company and the fund on 10 August 2015, whereby the fund was engaged to provide investment advisor services to the company, including funding alternatives related to other sovereign funds as well as private enterprises within Russia and select Asian countries. Within the context of this framework, in May 2016, the fund organised a high level meeting entitled “Economic and Investment Cooperation in the Far East” between Amur and a number of interested parties to discuss options and considerations for funding and participation in the development of Kun-Manie. Apart from a number of Russian economic agencies, these included the Korean Ministry of Strategy & Finance (International Economic Cooperation Division), the Korea Investment Corporation (Private Equity Team) and the Korea Exim Bank (Business Team).

In November, Amur announced the signing of a Financial Advisory Agreement with the newly established Russian Far East Investment & Export Agency to enable it to work in partnership with the agency to attract financing from within Russia, India and China.

In September, at the Eastern Economic Forum, Amur announced the signing of a non-binding Letter of Intent with IG Copper to investigate potential synergies in processing the companies’ respective sulphide concentrates.

In October, Amur signed a non-binding Memorandum of Understanding with Jinchuan (the largest producer of nickel in China and the third largest internationally) whereby the latter’s technical team began an effective due diligence process to assess the potential for assisting Amur in the development of Kun-Manie in the area of EPCM.

Ahead of development funding therefore, Amur already has relationships with a range of sovereign funds, parastatal organisations, Chinese funds, western and Russian banks and overseas corporations.

Valuation

In the absence of an updated mine plan, Edison’s forecasts and valuations are necessarily still based on Amur’s 2015 operational blueprint, although Amur estimates that the results of Gipronickel’s metallurgical test work alone could result in revenues being “increased by as much as 10% for nickel and 6% for copper” (note: to which end, readers are specifically directed towards Exhibit 11). At the same time, given the size of the newly defined resource and substantially higher grades, the previously projected annual production of nickel and copper at Kun-Manie could, in management’s opinion, “be increased by as much as 68% for nickel and 54% for copper”.

With this caveat in place, in our most recent valuation of Amur, we estimated values of the concentrate, low-grade matte, high-grade matte and refined metal options for Kun-Manie of 29c, 34c, 26c and 31c, respectively, using a 10% discount rate and at our long-term nickel price of US$22,355/t (and assuming 80:20 debt:equity funding). Updating these valuations to reflect Amur’s prevailing share price (vs c 5p previously) modifies these estimates to 39c, 51c, 41c and 50c, respectively, as shown below:

Exhibit 9: AMC equity valuations by development scenario and discount rate

US cents per share
(post-dilution)

0%

5%

10%
(base case)

15%

20%

25%

30%

IRR

(%)

Toll smelting – US$140m in equity fund-raising required

96

60

39

26

18

13

10

32.4

Low-grade matte – US$175m in equity fund-raising required

133

80

51

34

23

16

12

36.6

High-grade matte – US$220m in equity fund-raising required

110

65

41

26

18

12

9

30.7

Refinery – US$301m in equity fund-raising required

133

79

50

33

22

16

11

35.3

Source: Edison Investment Research. Note: Assuming 80% maximum financial leverage. Excludes warrant funding.

An analysis of the major component parts contributing to the change in our valuations of the separate development options is as follows:

Exhibit 10: Development option valuation changes, by component (US cents/share)

Development option

Last published

Change in share price and forex rates

2016 evolution into 2017

Other

Current valuation

Change

(%)

Toll smelting

29

+11

+4

-5

39

+34.4

Low-grade matte

34

+15

+5

-3

51

+50.0

High-grade matte

26

+12

+4

-1

41

+57.7

Refinery

31

+16

+5

-2

50

+61.3

Source: Edison Investment Research

Once again, the low-grade matte option prevails as the most efficient deployment of capital, although investors should note that this could change if the resource and mine plan are materially reconfigured as a result of the advancement of high-grade production from underground (which seems increasingly likely).

As previously, the above valuations were conducted at Edison’s long-term metals price forecasts of US$10.14/lb Ni, US$2.75/lb Cu, US$13.52/lb Co, US$1,123/oz Pt and US$768/oz Pd and are sensitive to them to the following extent:

Exhibit 11: Valuation sensitivity to metals prices, by development option (US cents/share)

Development option

Metals prices -10%

Base case*

Metals prices +10%

Ni +10%, Cu +6%

Toll smelting

25

39

52

52

Low-grade matte

38

51

63

63

High-grade matte

30

41

52

51

Refinery

38

50

61

60

Source: Edison Investment Research. Note: *See Exhibits 9 and 10 (above).

Financials

Amur’s 2016interim results reveal that it had a net cash position of US$11.5m as at 30 June 2016, after US$3.8m of cash outflows before financing activities – ie a cash burn rate of US$0.6m per month. Cash outflow is forecast to reduce in H216 in the absence of any material capital investments in property, plant or equipment, such that Edison forecasts a year-end cash position of US$9.3m as at 31 December 2016.

Exhibit 12: Financial summary

US$'000s

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016e

2017e

Year end 31 December

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

PROFIT & LOSS

Revenue

 

 

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Cost of Sales

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Gross Profit

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

EBITDA

 

 

(1,928)

(2,892)

(1,750)

(2,539)

(2,358)

(4,114)

(4,114)

(4,114)

Operating Profit (before GW and except.)

(1,928)

(2,892)

(1,750)

(2,539)

(2,358)

(4,114)

(4,114)

(4,114)

Intangible Amortisation

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Exceptionals

(328)

(1,505)

(435)

(151)

1,158

1,184

88

0

Other

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Operating Profit

(2,256)

(4,397)

(2,185)

(2,690)

(1,200)

(2,930)

(4,026)

(4,114)

Net Interest

0

(211)

(1,813)

(1,141)

(161)

2,224

144

140

Other

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Profit Before Tax (norm)

 

 

(1,928)

(3,103)

(3,563)

(3,680)

(2,519)

(1,890)

(3,970)

(3,974)

Profit Before Tax (FRS 3)

 

 

(2,256)

(4,608)

(3,998)

(3,831)

(1,361)

(706)

(3,882)

(3,974)

Tax

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Profit After Tax (norm)

(1,928)

(3,103)

(3,563)

(3,680)

(2,519)

(1,890)

(3,970)

(3,974)

Profit After Tax (FRS 3)

(2,256)

(4,608)

(3,998)

(3,831)

(1,361)

(706)

(3,882)

(3,974)

Average Number of Shares Outstanding (m)

193.9

271.8

345.1

387.2

431.2

445.7

527.5

1,230.5

EPS - normalised (c)

 

 

(1.0)

(1.1)

(1.0)

(1.0)

(0.6)

(0.4)

(0.8)

(0.3)

EPS - FRS 3 (c)

 

 

(1.2)

(1.7)

(1.2)

(1.0)

(0.3)

(0.2)

(0.7)

(0.3)

Dividend per share (c)

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

Gross Margin (%)

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

EBITDA Margin (%)

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Operating Margin (before GW and except.) (%)

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

BALANCE SHEET

Fixed Assets

 

 

14,151

13,903

17,928

18,955

12,035

12,162

15,162

22,703

Intangible Assets

13,685

13,503

17,084

18,318

11,783

11,513

14,513

14,513

Tangible Assets

466

400

844

637

252

649

649

8,190

Other receivables

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Current Assets

 

 

7,215

7,386

8,389

11,074

9,090

11,355

11,168

139,997

Stocks

167

165

224

269

237

512

512

512

Trade Debtors

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Cash

3,066

4,436

2,048

2,392

1,389

9,613

9,338

138,167

Other receivables/other

3,982

2,785

6,117

8,413

7,464

1,230

1,318

1,318

Current Liabilities

 

 

(109)

(102)

(119)

(123)

(407)

(539)

(539)

(539)

Creditors

(109)

(102)

(119)

(123)

(407)

(539)

(539)

(539)

Short term borrowings

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Long Term Liabilities

 

 

0

0

0

0

0

(509)

(509)

(509)

Long term borrowings

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Other long term liabilities

0

0

0

0

0

(509)

(509)

(509)

Net Assets

 

 

21,257

21,187

26,198

29,906

20,718

22,469

25,282

161,652

CASH FLOW

Operating Cash Flow

 

 

(1,201)

(2,761)

(1,071)

(1,556)

(1,960)

(3,090)

(4,114)

(4,114)

Net Interest

0

0

0

0

0

0

144

140

Tax

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Capex

(492)

(20)

(3,482)

(2,315)

(748)

(2,751)

(3,000)

(7,541)

Acquisitions/disposals

363

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Financing

3,527

4,344

2,165

4,242

1,841

14,407

6,694

140,344

Dividends

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Net Cash Flow

2,197

1,563

(2,388)

371

(867)

8,566

(276)

128,829

Opening net debt/(cash)

 

 

(997)

(3,066)

(4,436)

(2,048)

(2,392)

(1,389)

(9,613)

(9,338)

HP finance leases initiated

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Other

(128)

(193)

0

(27)

(136)

(342)

0

0

Closing net debt/(cash)

 

 

(3,066)

(4,436)

(2,048)

(2,392)

(1,389)

(9,613)

(9,338)

(138,167)

Source: Amur Minerals sources, Edison Investment Research

Edison, the investment intelligence firm, is the future of investor interaction with corporates. Our team of over 100 analysts and investment professionals work with leading companies, fund managers and investment banks worldwide to support their capital markets activity. We provide services to more than 400 retained corporate and investor clients from our offices in London, New York, Frankfurt and Sydney. Edison is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority. Edison Investment Research (NZ) Limited (Edison NZ) is the New Zealand subsidiary of Edison. Edison NZ is registered on the New Zealand Financial Service Providers Register (FSP number 247505) and is registered to provide wholesale and/or generic financial adviser services only. Edison Investment Research Inc (Edison US) is the US subsidiary of Edison and is regulated by the Securities and Exchange Commission. Edison Investment Research Limited (Edison Aus) [46085869] is the Australian subsidiary of Edison and is not regulated by the Australian Securities and Investment Commission. Edison Germany is a branch entity of Edison Investment Research Limited [4794244]. www.edisongroup.com

DISCLAIMER
Copyright 2017 Edison Investment Research Limited. All rights reserved. This report has been commissioned by Amur Minerals and prepared and issued by Edison for publication globally. All information used in the publication of this report has been compiled from publicly available sources that are believed to be reliable, however we do not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of this report. Opinions contained in this report represent those of the research department of Edison at the time of publication. The securities described in the Investment Research may not be eligible for sale in all jurisdictions or to certain categories of investors. This research is issued in Australia by Edison Aus and any access to it, is intended only for "wholesale clients" within the meaning of the Australian Corporations Act. The Investment Research is distributed in the United States by Edison US to major US institutional investors only. Edison US is registered as an investment adviser with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Edison US relies upon the "publishers' exclusion" from the definition of investment adviser under Section 202(a)(11) of the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 and corresponding state securities laws. As such, Edison does not offer or provide personalised advice. We publish information about companies in which we believe our readers may be interested and this information reflects our sincere opinions. The information that we provide or that is derived from our website is not intended to be, and should not be construed in any manner whatsoever as, personalised advice. Also, our website and the information provided by us should not be construed by any subscriber or prospective subscriber as Edison’s solicitation to effect, or attempt to effect, any transaction in a security. The research in this document is intended for New Zealand resident professional financial advisers or brokers (for use in their roles as financial advisers or brokers) and habitual investors who are “wholesale clients” for the purpose of the Financial Advisers Act 2008 (FAA) (as described in sections 5(c) (1)(a), (b) and (c) of the FAA). This is not a solicitation or inducement to buy, sell, subscribe, or underwrite any securities mentioned or in the topic of this document. This document is provided for information purposes only and should not be construed as an offer or solicitation for investment in any securities mentioned or in the topic of this document. A marketing communication under FCA Rules, this document has not been prepared in accordance with the legal requirements designed to promote the independence of investment research and is not subject to any prohibition on dealing ahead of the dissemination of investment research.
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Edison, the investment intelligence firm, is the future of investor interaction with corporates. Our team of over 100 analysts and investment professionals work with leading companies, fund managers and investment banks worldwide to support their capital markets activity. We provide services to more than 400 retained corporate and investor clients from our offices in London, New York, Frankfurt and Sydney. Edison is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority. Edison Investment Research (NZ) Limited (Edison NZ) is the New Zealand subsidiary of Edison. Edison NZ is registered on the New Zealand Financial Service Providers Register (FSP number 247505) and is registered to provide wholesale and/or generic financial adviser services only. Edison Investment Research Inc (Edison US) is the US subsidiary of Edison and is regulated by the Securities and Exchange Commission. Edison Investment Research Limited (Edison Aus) [46085869] is the Australian subsidiary of Edison and is not regulated by the Australian Securities and Investment Commission. Edison Germany is a branch entity of Edison Investment Research Limited [4794244]. www.edisongroup.com

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Frankfurt +49 (0)69 78 8076 960

Schumannstrasse 34b

60325 Frankfurt

Germany

London +44 (0)20 3077 5700

280 High Holborn

London, WC1V 7EE

United Kingdom

New York +1 646 653 7026

245 Park Avenue, 39th Floor

10167, New York

US

Sydney +61 (0)2 9258 1161

Level 25, Aurora Place

88 Phillip St, Sydney

NSW 2000, Australia

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