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						Cannabis craze weeds out junior mining field
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		 [February 07, 2019]   
		By Joe Bavier and Barbara Lewis 
 CAPE TOWN (Reuters) - A boom in cannabis 
		investment is siphoning capital away from mining and hitting junior 
		miners hardest, forcing them to up their game and potentially improving 
		the quality of projects in a sector long rife with cowboy speculators.
 
 Canada's relaxation of cannabis laws culminated in legalization for 
		recreational use in October. Other jurisdictions are following suit or 
		liberalizing their laws on medical or health use, creating an industry 
		that has lured a breed of high-risk, high-return investors.
 
 The world's top three listed cannabis companies - Canopy Growth, Tilray 
		and Aurora Cannabis - have a combined market value of around $30 
		billion. And consumers are expected to spend over $7 billion on cannabis 
		products in Canada alone this year, according to Deloitte.
 
 In Africa, where miners met this week for Cape Town's African Mining 
		Indaba conference, cannabis companies are setting up projects in 
		Lesotho, while other countries, including Zimbabwe and South Africa, 
		plan to issue license.
 
		
		 
		
 "Raising money is extremely difficult," said Patrick Downey, head of 
		Canadian junior gold exploration company Orezone Gold, who compared the 
		cannabis boom to the headwinds juniors faced during the dot-com bubble 
		of the late 1990s.
 
 "It's a cyclical business, and it will come back," Downey said. "But you 
		have to have a good project."
 
 The rise of cannabis comes at a time when investors were already turning 
		away from mining.
 
 "The biggest problem in mining is that it destroys shareholder value," 
		said Philip Hopwood, Deloitte's global mining and metals leader.
 
 Miners operating in Africa - already viewed by many investors as a 
		particularly risky bet - have been doubly hit.
 
 "It's like the straw that broke the camel's back," said one explorer at 
		the Indaba.
 
 SURVIVAL OF THE FITTEST
 
 As early IPOs, once a right of passage for exploration juniors, have 
		slowed to a trickle with cannabis stocks delivering better short-term 
		returns, miners are increasingly turning to private equity.
 
		
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			A man holds a jar full of cannabis buds at an expo in Pretoria, 
			South Africa, December 13, 2018. REUTERS Siphiwe Sibeko/File Photo 
            
			 
And as active investors replace passive stockholders, companies are having to 
sell the merits of their projects to more discerning potential backers. 
Sebastien de Montessus - chief executive of Endeavour Mining, one of the most 
successful mid-tier gold players - considers it a process of natural selection.
 "It's a good thing ... You're going to have to be stronger and better," he told 
Reuters in an interview at the Indaba.
 
 The CEO of Barrick Gold, one of the world's biggest gold companies, said 
mining's struggles to fend off the challenge from cannabis reflected the poor 
state of the industry in the eyes of prospective investors.
 
"We should be embarrassed that somebody is prepared to make a choice between 
those two options," Mark Bristow told Reuters. "(Mining) is just so 
fundamentally material to our everyday lives, whereas I can't say the same of 
cannabis."
 Majors such as Barrick and companies with projects already in production can 
better weather the storm.
 
 The newest juniors in the riskiest areas are racing to adapt. And some are 
getting creative.
 
 Prospect Resources' executive director Harry Greaves on Wednesday won an award 
at the Indaba for his lithium project in Zimbabwe.
 
 He said Australian and Chinese investment had helped. And he was also 
considering growing cannabis at his lithium site on the outskirts of Zimbabwe's 
capital Harare.
 
 "We don't yet have a marijuana license, but we have the land available," he 
said.
 
 (Editing by Dale Hudson)
 
				 
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