by Ganesh Sahathevan
On 4 September 2013 the story below was sent the Monetary Authority Of Singapore. It was authored by this writer and posted on his gsahathevan blog. The article is based on a collection of articles published by Liongold, the company at the centre of the SGX Catalyst Penny Stock Crash Of 2013, and mining industry paper PNG Report.
On 13 September 2013 the MAS was also provided the second story below from The Australian. The story included this statement:
If it were listed on the ASX, where gold equities have been smashed since April, LionGold would be lucky to be valued at a fraction of what it commands in Singapore -- especially given it is only part-way to 200,000 ounces of annual production.
On 23 September 2013 an email was received from the MAS, authored by one Chen Yiyi Primary Markets Conduct Division ,Market Conduct Department, which said, amongst other things:
The market valuation of a listed company depends on the market’s view of the underlying value of the company’s business, its assets and future growth potential. Prompt and accurate disclosure of material information on a listed company and its business facilitates proper pricing of its shares by market participants, and avoids the establishment of a false market in the trading of the listed company’s shares. While MAS is not in a position to comment on the valuation of a company, we would like to highlight that companies listed on SGX, including LionGold, are subject to continuing listing obligations under the SGX listing rules......As SGX has the responsibility to ensure that listed companies comply with the SGX listing rules (including the obligation to disclose material information), we would like to seek your consent to forward your email to SGX. Where there are suspected breaches of the law or regulations, we will conduct a thorough investigation and take firm and appropriate action in the event a breach is established.
Consent was provided, while impressing upon Ms Chen that the information was in the public domain.
On October 4 2013 the market in Liongold and related stocks crashed.
Readers should note that market manipulation began in August 2012, and media spin which bordered on fantasy was already evident in June 2013.
TO BE READ WITH
SGX listed LionCorpGold spins its Ballarat gold field assets as a billion dollar proposition, despite ample Australian disclosures to the contrary
The LionGoldCorp spin:
Under Castlemaine ownership, the Ballarat gold mine poured its first gold bar in September
2011. The mine then embarked on a six to nine month production ramp-up. The average
annualised rate for the 9 months to December 2012 has been 30,000 ounces per annum. The
Ballarat gold mine is expected to produce between 40,000 and 50,000 ounces of gold in 2013.
Commenting on Castlemaine’s achievement, Chief Executive Officer Nicholas Ng stated,
“Ballarat has made the transition from explorer to producer and is targeting an
annualised production rate of between 40,000 to 50,000 ounces in 2013. With the
successful ramp-up complete, LionGold has demonstrated its ability to identify and
acquire gold projects which build value for our shareholders. We look forward to
providing updates on the Group’s other projects as these are progressed”
The underlying reality, reported on 21 November 2011, AFTER Castlemaine's "achievement of pouring its
first gold bar in September 2011 :
GOLD miner Castlemaine Goldfields is holding talks to shore up finances after being forced to downgrade production at the Ballarat underground operation in Victoria it acquired off Lihir Gold more than 18 months ago.
Coming out of a trading halt on Friday, Castlemaine warned of an 8000 ounce shortfall in production over the next six months based on inferred resources for the Mako Fault Zone of 100,000 tonnes at 10.5 grams per tonne gold for a contained 33,100oz.
Castlemaine is the latest group to encounter problems at Ballarat after buying the problematic asset from Lihir in May last year for $A4.5 million in cash plus a 2.5% royalty interest, based on a net smelter return from future production, capped at $50 million.
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