Dateline reloads with $35m to fast-track US gold play

Dateline Resources has given the market a clear signal that it means business, locking in a $35 million placement as the company looks to complete a bankable feasibility study (BFS) and fast-track its Colosseum gold project in California towards production.
Under the term sheet, the company issued 112.9 million new shares at 31 cents each, representing a modest 7.8 per cent discount to the 10-day volume-weighted average price (VWAP).
Shaw and Partners acted as the sole bookrunner and according to Dateline, the issue was well supported by existing shareholders and institutional investors.
The new funds have been earmarked for the completion of the bankable feasibility study, early site works, long-lead items, key management recruits and general working capital.
This capital enables us to act decisively in advancing development, expanding drilling, and testing deeper targets, while progressing a potential U.S. listing strategy. Our focus remains squarely on execution and value creation for shareholders.
The company’s Colosseum project is shaping up to be a textbook case of location, timing and leverage stars all lining up at once.
Sitting just north of MP Materials’ Mountain Pass operation - the only producing rare earths mine in the US – it enjoys the benefit of a mining-friendly jurisdiction with infrastructure, workforce and history all on its side.
However, it is the soaring gold price, hitting an all-time high of US$4940 (A$7224) per ounce last night, that is likely to shape the project’s narrative in the immediate future.
The company’s wholly owned mine hosts a solid gold resource of 27.1 million tonnes grading 1.26 grams per tonne (g/t) gold, for around 1.1 million ounces of contained gold, with more than two-thirds of that sitting in the higher-confidence measured reserves and indicated resource categories.
Importantly, recent drilling has been doing exactly what investors like to see – extending mineralisation beneath existing pits and delivering beefy intercepts that suggest the system could have plenty more to give.
The drill bit delivered in spades, outlining broad near-surface runs of around 300 metres at just over 1g/t gold alongside higher-grade hits of 62 metres at 2.5g/t from 26 metres, including a standout 10.7-metre section grading 7.3g/t. Together, the results point to a robust, scalable open-pit operation.
A scoping study released last year laid the groundwork for development, outlining a straightforward open-pit mining operation feeding a conventional two-million-tonne-per-annum carbon-in-leach processing plant. The simplicity of the setup is likely to underpin a low-risk pathway towards production.
At the time of the scoping study, an assumed long-term gold price of US$2,900 (A$4260) an ounce was used, delivering a pre-tax internal rate of return of 61 per cent and a pre-tax net present value of US$550 million (A$821m) at a 6.5 per cent discount rate.
Additionally, the updated numbers figure a production of 635,000 ounces over a 9-year mine life, for total revenue of US$827 million (about A$1234 billion) - numbers bound to turn heads in any market.
Since then, the gold price has gone on a tear, charging to US$4940 (A$7224) an ounce. That surge alone has materially improved the project’s economics, adding a real shine to a development case that was already appealing.
Metallurgical work has also come up with the goods, confirming gold recoveries of 91 to 92 per cent at a relatively coarse grind size, in keeping with historical mining at Colosseum.
All of these factors de-risk the flowsheet and will support the company’s upcoming BFS, which is still on track for completion later this year.
On the exploration front, Dateline plans to continue probing the broader system for additional breccia pipes and gold extensions, while keeping an eye on the rare earths potential that comes with being next door to Mountain Pass.
Adding extra weight to the story is growing US government support. Colosseum has been flagged as strategically important, with senior-level recognition underscoring the project’s relevance to domestic supply chains at a time when the United States is keen to secure critical minerals, including rare earths and precious metals, on home soil.
With permits already in place, strong economics, rising gold prices and a bolstered balance sheet, Dateline is edging closer to a construction decision.
If momentum continues, Colosseum could soon move from a well-advanced study to one of the more intriguing near-term gold development stories to emerge from California in recent years.
Is your ASX-listed company doing something interesting? Contact: matt.birney@wanews.com.au
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