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Higher gold price delivers Dateline glittering US project numbers

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Dateline Resources’ Colosseum gold mine numbers were boosted after the company lifted its scoping study gold price assumptions to US$2900 (A$4460) per ounce.
Camera IconDateline Resources’ Colosseum gold mine numbers were boosted after the company lifted its scoping study gold price assumptions to US$2900 (A$4460) per ounce. Credit: File

Dateline Resources’ share price continued to surge as high as 5.6 cents this week - not far from the coveted 10-bagger status this month - after the company recalibrated its gold price assumptions for its United States-based Colosseum gold project. This update sent the economics of its flagship play into overdrive.

In a market where yellow metal prices have touched all-time highs of US$3500 (A$5400) per ounce recently and regularly trade above US$3200, the company has revised its scoping study forecast upwards from US$2200 to US$2900 per ounce as part of its ongoing bankable feasibility study (BFS).

The key price adjustment delivered a whopping 134 per cent jump in net present value for the project from US$235 million ($A361M) to US$550M (A$850M).

Boosting the project’s appeal, the latest scoping study is just six months old, so the project’s production and cost assumptions have remained largely unchanged. It means every dollar of the gold price uplift will go straight to Dateline’s bottom line.

The forecast payback for the project has also been reduced from 3.3 years to 1.6 years as the internal rate of return (IRR) before tax almost doubled from 31 per cent to a lustrous 61 per cent.

Dateline’s September scoping study numbers paint a compelling picture. The company has forecast production of 635,000 ounces of gold over an 8.3-year mine life with annual production averaging 71,000 ounces grading 1.3 grams per tonne (g/t). The project has a blistering gold recovery rate of 92 per cent.

Operating costs are expected to peg at US$1182 (A$1818) per ounce, with all-in sustaining costs at US$1490 (A$2292), which is well below Dateline’s revised gold price and paves the way for strong margins if the BFS holds firm.

The Colosseum mine currently hosts a resource of 27.1 million tonnes grading 1.26g/t for 1.1 million ounces of gold. More than two-thirds of the mineralisation sits in the measured and indicated categories.

A full 89 per cent of the initial five years of mill feed comes from the higher-confidence classes, which is more than enough to exceed the project’s improved payback period by almost 3.5 years.

Although Dateline acknowledges its current study is still early stage, with a 35 per cent margin of error, it says the results highlight Colosseum’s strength.

While the company’s market cap of US$95M (A$146M) appears modest compared to the estimated US$153M (A$235M) needed for pre-production capital, management says it remains confident it can close the funding gap without diluting shareholder value.

Colosseum is within California’s prolific Walker Lane Trend and doesn’t just tell a gold story. It is 10 kilometres from the world-class Mountain Pass rare earth mine, in a geological setting that also points to rare earths potential. This presents Dateline with a strategic bonus in today’s critical minerals race.

The company made headlines at the start of the month after a high-profile shout out from US President Donald Trump, who publicly backed the company’s Colosseum rare earth credentials in a weekly update on his Truth Social platform, dubbing it “America’s second rare earths mine”.

The endorsement followed a major regulatory win, with the US Interior Department reaffirming Dateline’s right to mine at its historic Californian leases, marking a pivotal moment for the company’s rare earths ambitions.

Riding the momentum, Dateline is now in advanced planning for a dedicated rare earths drilling campaign at Colosseum, led by global rare earths experts Dr Anthony Mariano and Tony Mariano.

The company is also preparing to tap into US capital markets, following strong interest from overseas investors. Management is targeting a listing on the OTCQB Venture Market in the third quarter this year to broaden its investor base and boost visibility in the world’s largest economy.

With feasibility work in full swing, Dateline is gearing up to turn Colosseum into a cornerstone asset, which could become a serious gold and rare earths contender in the US mining revival.

Is your ASX-listed company doing something interesting? Contact: matt.birney@wanews.com.au

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