Aben
Resources Ltd. (ABN:TSX.V; ABNAF:OTCQB) recently announced results from
the first shipment of drill core from its 2019 drill program at the Forrest
Kerr gold project in the Golden Triangle (GT) of British Columbia, Canada.
Results from three of ten completed drill holes were reported. Nothing too
exciting in the assays, the best intercept was 61.7 meters of 0.46 g/t gold (August corp. presentation).
The market spoke, and it spoke loudly. The press release was not well received. But why such a
negative response? Shares plummeted to $0.135, down 27%, before ending
Wednesday at $0.155, and dropping a penny on Thursday to $0.145.
Trading volume of 3 million shares was the heaviest of the year. I would
have expected something like this if the company was out of cash, with no
more results pending.
But that's simply not the case, Aben remains well funded. Eric Sprott is
the largest shareholder. (Note: In the remainder of this piece I
suggest that Aben's share price [could, might, possibly, potentially] rebound
from $0.145. However, I don't know when or if this will happen, or how much
of a rebound is likely.)
First and foremost, we need to see one or more strong drill holes reported
in September, October or November. This remains quite possible because the
zones being drilled are still open along strike and at depth.
All drill holes are important in understanding the geology, to
better target zones of mineralization. The GT is known to have complex
geology, as is the case with a lot of deposits in the district. Even assays
that are not that exciting help explain geology and structure, improving
Aben's chances of success.
What if there's nothing left to find?
Management believes there's likely to be more high-grade gold on the
property. Gold zones identified so far came from a powerful mineralizing
event. The team is up in the GT this week planning the next batch of drill
holes, and they remain optimistic for the remainder of this season.
Management pointed out that last year's blockbuster hole FK18-10 (multiple
high-grade zones, including 62.4 g/t gold over 6 meters within 38.7 g/t gold
over 10 meters) was targeted based on a high-grade surface sample. Aben has
several new target areas supported by high-grade surface showings that will
be drilled over the next several weeks. Strong intercepts from any of these
new areas would be deemed a new discovery.
A lot of angst, disgruntlement and fear over just three assays?!?
Along with a few disappointing drill holes was the arguably more important
news that management is doubling down on its drill program. Aben is expanding
the budget and intends to continue drilling into September. The team is
drilling another 12–14 holes at Forrest Kerr and should end the season with
about $2 million in the bank.
On just three assays of up to 24 expected from the Golden Triangle this
season, Aben is down 24% from $0.19 per share to $0.145. It has fallen out of
the top 10 GT juniors, as ranked by enterprise value (EV) [market cap + debt
– cash], now sitting at #13 with an EV of $13 million.
The company's share price is down 70% from its 52-week high. That's the
worst decline among the top 20 GT juniors. Is the considerable share price
weakness justified?
While the press release was not great, it wasn't all bad either. . .
The following are two streamlined quotes from the press release that
describe the drill program at Forrest Kerr. There's a fair amount of
technical data in the press release for readers interested in that. I'm keeping
it simple in this article:
"The goal of this year's drill program is to test a specific area of
the North Boundary Zone and the area around the historic 'Noranda hole' and a
corresponding new zone south of the Noranda hole. These three assays are from
widely spaced holes, peripheral to the main zone of mineralization. Each
encountered variable and intermittent polymetallic mineralization."
Obviously, the goal of this year's drill program has not been defeated by
the first three drill holes! In fact, the team believes the goal is alive and
well, thus a more than doubling of the number of holes from 10 (completed) to
a total of up to 24. Presumably, management would not do this unless they had
good reasons:
"Mineralization corresponds to multiple and widespread fault and
shear zone structures. The mineralized structures correlate very well with
magnetic highs delineated by an airborne survey flown in May 2019. Drilling
on this part of Forrest Kerr has only tested a small portion of the
potentially mineralized structures defined by the magnetic survey."
Only a small portion of potentially mineralized structures defined by a
magnetic survey have been tested. Again, the goal remains intact: to drill
test very specific zones with potential for high-grade mineralization.
Gold price up nearly US$300/ounce since this time last year!
Readers should not forget the critical importance of today's gold price of
approximately CA$2,000/ounce. In U.S. dollars, gold is at a 64-month high!
Last year, Golden Triangle juniors were working with a
US$1,200–$1,250/ounce gold price backdrop. Anything above US$1,400/oz. is
awesome in my opinion. Last year's lower gold price did not prevent some
spectacular gains from select GT players. For example, who can forget GT Gold Corp.
(GTT:TSX.V)?
GT Gold from $0.43 per share to $2.10 (+388%); August to November 2018
I never wrote about GT Gold, or invested in it, so I'm not biased or tooting
my own horn by mentioning it. Yet, GT Gold actually sold off on mediocre
drill results in mid-August 2018, from $0.74 to $0.43 (down 42%!) in just
eight days. Two months later, strong assays sent shares soaring above $2.
The five-year stock chart of Aben Resources suggests a real possibility of
a large move if we get strong drill results. Don't read too much into this
chart. I'm not an adherent of technical analysis.
Twice, in the third quarters of 2017 and 2018, Aben's share price traded,
briefly, in the $0.45-$0.50 range. In 2016 Aben's stock was up over 400% from
low to high in the third quarter. On Aug. 28 2018, Aben traded at a 52-week
high of $0.49 and closed at $0.45.
On the same day, the gold price was $1,207/ounce versus the Aug. 20, 2019
price of $1,507/ounce. By no means does this predict anything, it only leads
me to believe that there's a decent chance of a significant move in the share
price if, and only if, one or more drill holes hit high-grade
mineralization.
Each year a few GT juniors make big moves in August through November
How big a move is anyone's guess, but I noticed that within just the past
month, ABN's share price traded as high as $0.26. A return to $0.26 per share
would be a gain of 79%.
CONCLUSION
Aben Resources is the 13th largest Golden Triangle junior (EVs ranging
from a few million up to GGI's $182 million). Based on just a few drill
holes, investors traded three million shares on Aug. 20, sending the share
price significantly lower, seemingly concluding that nothing good could
possibly come from the remaining (roughly) 20 assays.
No one knows what the future holds for Aben, but selling shares now, with
over 85% of total assays pending, seems like a knee-jerk reaction. Anyone
holding shares for many months up until now, why sell in August??? Could
shares go lower? Yes, absolutely.
However, for GT players, August-September-October is when big moves in
share prices often occur (if they occur at all). That's the whole point of
owning shares in these critical months! It's happened twice before for Aben;
will it happen again this year?
August Corporate Presentation
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Peter Epstein is the founder of Epstein Research. His
background is in company and financial analysis. He holds an MBA degree in
financial analysis from New York University's Stern School of Business.
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