ZRL 0.00% 3.7¢ zambezi resources limited

6 days and counting, page-4

  1. 4,270 Posts.
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    scooter, I think the 18Nov 2014 update dealt with that issue. I suspect the greenies will have to come up with some pretty new and radical arguments to gain a hearing in the supreme court.

    Meanwhile:


    Royalty tax will hit revenue from Zambia, but gold miners still profit
    Date
    April 24, 2015 - 7:30AM

    Chris Mfula

    Barrick Gold, the world's biggest gold producer, said on Thursday it will not suspend operations at its Lumwana open-pit copper mine in Zambia now that the country's government has reduced mining royalties.
    Zambia's cabinet set the royalty tax rate for open-pit and underground mining at 9 percent on Monday. The corporate income tax rate will be 30 percent and the mineral processing tax rate will be 35 percent when the law takes effect on July 1.
    "We appreciate the leadership and engagement of President (Edgar) Lungu and the government of Zambia on this matter," Barrick Co-President Kelvin Dushinsky in a statement. "While Lumwana still faces challenges, in light of the government's recent announcement we intend to continue operations at this time"
    The changes are yet to be approved by the parliament in Africa's second-largest copper producer, but are expected to receive support from the assembly.
    Zambia decided in January to increase royalties for open pit mines to 20 percent from 6 percent and raise rates for underground mines to 8 percent from 6 percent. The move rattled unions and mining companies and forced the government to review the plan.
    Barrick had warned in December that it would suspend operations at Lumwana due to the royalty rate hike, which it said would make the mine uneconomic.
    About 2000 workers at Lumwana held a one-day strike in February to protest possible job losses but Zambia's president said his government would not allow mining jobs to be lost, and directed his cabinet to review the royalties.
    However, Vedanta Resources' Zambian copper unit, Konkola Copper Mines, said it would continue to lose money under the new tax regime.
    Steven Din, chief executive of KCM, which runs an open pit and underground mine as well as a copper smelting plant, said late on Wednesday that he was comforted by the government's willingness to talk to mining companies.
    "So if the mining companies certainly feel that they still have difficulties, I believe that the government will be listening and then we will have a win-win solution," Din said.
    Other foreign companies running mines in Zambia include Glencore and Canada's First Quantum Minerals.
    Newmont Mining reported first-quarter earnings that beat analysts' estimates after the biggest US gold miner's costs were lower than expected.
    Net income rose to US37¢ a share from US20¢ a year earlier, Colorado-based Newmont said Thursday in a statement. Earnings excluding one-time items were US46¢ a share, beating the 22-cent average of 16 estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Sales increased to $US1.97 billion from $1.76 billion, more than the $1.93 billion average estimate.
    Newmont, the world's second-largest gold producer after Canada's Barrick Gold Corp., is working to lower costs as gold trades about 38 percent below its 2011 intraday peak. The company started building a new, lower-cost operation in Suriname last year and this month approved construction of the first phase of another Nevada mine.
    Newmont's average cost was $US609 an ounce of gold in the first quarter, compared with $751 a year earlier and the $692 average of six estimates compiled by Bloomberg.
    Gold futures averaged $US1217.46 an ounce in the quarter on the Comex in New York, 5.9 percent less than a year earlier.

    http://www.theage.com.au/business/m...gold-miners-still-profit-20150423-1ms5f2.html
 
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