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	<title>News - Caravel Minerals Limited</title>
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	<title>News - Caravel Minerals Limited</title>
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		<title>As the copper boom unfolds, Caravel has the scale to stand out from the crowd</title>
		<link>https://caravelminerals.com.au/as-the-copper-boom-unfolds-caravel-has-the-scale-to-stand-out-from-the-crowd/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=as-the-copper-boom-unfolds-caravel-has-the-scale-to-stand-out-from-the-crowd</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Nick Jerrat]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 23 Jan 2026 01:39:40 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Announcements]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://caravelminerals.com.au/?p=101629</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Don Hyma’s name is well known in the mining industry.</p>
<p>But the well-spoken Canadian is an unusual figure to be seen at the small end of town.</p>
<p>Flip through the pages of his tome-like resume and the bounty of experience is palpable – with boots both on the ground and in the C-suite at Rio Tinto (ASX:RIO), Fortescue (ASX:FMG) and Mitsui.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://caravelminerals.com.au/as-the-copper-boom-unfolds-caravel-has-the-scale-to-stand-out-from-the-crowd/">As the copper boom unfolds, Caravel has the scale to stand out from the crowd</a> first appeared on <a href="https://caravelminerals.com.au">Caravel Minerals Limited</a>.</p>]]></description>
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					<div class="pt-plus-text-block-wrapper" data-tp-gsap-textblock="" ><div class="text_block_parallax"><div class="pt_plus_adv_text_block " ><div class="text-content-block"><ul><li><strong>After years as a mine builder, Don Hyma is planning his next major development at copper junior Caravel Minerals</strong></li><li><strong>Adani-backed project will be one of the largest copper mines in Australia once built</strong></li><li><strong>Stock is surging as copper price rises to record highs on supply shortage</strong></li></ul><p>Don Hyma’s name is well known in the mining industry.</p><p>But the well-spoken Canadian is an unusual figure to be seen at the small end of town.</p><p>Flip through the pages of his tome-like resume and the bounty of experience is palpable – with boots both on the ground and in the C-suite at <a href="https://stockhead.com.au/company/rio-tinto-rio/"><strong>Rio Tinto (ASX:RIO)</strong></a>, <a href="https://stockhead.com.au/company/fortescue-fmg/"><strong>Fortescue (ASX:FMG)</strong></a> and Mitsui.</p><p>Take a step back and two decades at Falconbridge, now part of Glencore, including a role spearheading the construction of the massive concentrator at the Collahuasi copper mine in Chile – one of the world’s three largest copper producers.</p><figure id="attachment_183640" class="wp-caption alignnone" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-183640"><img fetchpriority="high" decoding="async" class="size-full wp-image-183640" src="https://stockhead.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/2.-CaravelMineralsCVVTeamBioDonHyma500px.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="436" /><figcaption id="caption-attachment-183640" class="wp-caption-text">Don Hyma has spearheaded some of the largest mining projects in the world and is looking to repeat the feat at Caravel. Pic: CVV/Stockhead</figcaption></figure><p>That mine is now at the centre of two of the biggest (proposed) M&amp;A deals in mining history – Anglo American and Glencore each own 44% alongside a subsidiary of Mitsui, and Anglo shareholders have already approved a US$53bn tie-up with the majority owner of the nearby Quebrada Blanca mine Teck, while Glencore is in the cross-hairs of Rio.</p><p>Unlike many junior company heads, Hyma is a mine and infrastructure builder. That was one of the attributes that made the unconventional union with micro cap copper developer <a href="https://stockhead.com.au/company/caravel-minerals-cvv/"><strong>Caravel Minerals (ASX:CVV)</strong></a> a marriage made in heaven when he parlayed his role as a technical advisor into the managing director’s chair in 2023.</p><p>Caravel’s main game is a giant low grade porphyry around 90 minutes’ drive inland from Perth, which stands to be the largest new copper mine developed in Australia since OZ Minerals completed construction of the now <a href="https://stockhead.com.au/company/bhp-bhp/"><strong>BHP (ASX:BHP)</strong></a> owned Carrapateena in 2019.</p><p>And with copper prices at record levels in the orbit of US$13,000/t, the timing of a new definitive feasibility study due later this year could not be better.</p><p>“We’re seeing supply disruptions of these old mines around the world and at the same time, we’re seeing demand in copper over the next 10 years like we’ve never seen demand before,” Hyma said.</p><p>“<b></b>And it is largely driven by decarbonisation and renewables and things like AI centres and wind turbines, electric vehicles, et cetera – things that didn’t exist 25 years ago are very much underpinning the forward looking demand.</p><p>“So we’re seeing this perfect storm of declining supply and very robust demand.”</p><figure id="attachment_183639" class="wp-caption alignnone" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-183639"><img decoding="async" class="size-full wp-image-183639" src="https://stockhead.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Screenshot-2026-01-22-at-4.16.26-pm.png" alt="" width="1127" height="626" /><figcaption id="caption-attachment-183639" class="wp-caption-text">Discovery rates have cratered, putting emphasis on Caravel’s position as a major future copper supplier. Pic: CVV</figcaption></figure><h2>The Pilbara of copper</h2><p>Given his past working on Collahuasi, it would be tantalising to make links to Caravel’s future development.</p><p>Hyma and many members of his team have indeed been there and done that before. But the projects are very different in nature.</p><p>A bonafide tier-1 deposit, Collahuasi pumps out around 600,000t of copper per annum at a grade of ~0.9% Cu, very high these days for a porphyry.</p><p>But Caravel has its own charms. Expected to run at a rate of +60,000tpa for well over 20 years based on numbers disclosed in a previous study, the project runs at a far lower grade of 0.24% Cu – or a higher 0.27% in its important ramp up years.</p><p>Yet there are distinct advantages for Caravel. Its distance from Perth makes it a prime candidate as a drive in drive out or even residential operation and at a strip ratio of 1.22:1, or 0.64:1 in its first five years, Hyma says the economics make its extraction more like the low-lying bulk iron ore mines of the Pilbara than the mountainous Andean projects of Chile, Peru and Argentina.</p><p>Those same environmental factors make the future mine a prime candidate for automated trucking, pulling further costs out of the system and enabling some employees to work closer to home in Perth.</p><p><b></b>“It’s the copper equivalent to the big iron mines in the Pilbara and we know how to reduce our costs by going to scale, but also by multiplying automation,” Hyma said.</p><p>“<b></b>We have ways of reducing costs, and by virtue of a bulk mine we can scale up the operation, and that’s what creates the profit margin for a project like Caravel,” Hyma said.</p><p>“<b></b>The iron ore guys do exactly the same thing. They lower their cutoff grade of iron ore, they go to as high a scale as they can, and they create massive profit margin to earn their shareholders the returns that they’re expecting.</p><p>“<b></b>We’re not the Pilbara in money terms, but certainly the concept applies for us.”</p><h2>Copper valuations soar</h2><p>With prices surging to record highs and expectations of continued demand growth, just about every major has set out their stall in the copper sector.</p><p>That has placed a premium on valuations, with <a href="https://stockhead.com.au/company/bhp-bhp/"><strong>BHP (ASX:BHP)</strong></a> CEO Mike Henry suggesting tier-1 copper producers clocked in at around US$50,000/t copper intensity equivalent.</p><p><strong><a href="https://stockhead.com.au/resources/monsters-of-rock-want-copper-youre-going-to-have-to-pay-a-pretty-price/">CRU Group principal copper analyst Robert Edwards thinks a compromise will be met at around US$40,000 for tonne of annual copper production</a> </strong>with ASX-listed <a href="https://stockhead.com.au/company/sandfire-resources-sfr/"><strong>Sandfire Resources (ASX:SFR)</strong></a> – a second-tier player by global standards – already clocking in at around US$39,000/t on its current valuation.</p><p>At a market cap of $230 million, that suggests Caravel has plenty of room to run even after a 156% gain in the past six months, given its planned production rate of +60,000tpa.</p><p>In 2024, Rex Minerals was poached by Indonesia’s MACH for $393 million for South Australia’s Hillside copper project. While more advanced than Caravel and shovel ready, its planned production rate will be less than half of the Caravel development.</p><p>The run in Caravel’s share price has all been about copper price so far, Hyma said. Around 80% of CVV’s future revenues will come from the Red Metal once molybdenum and precious metals credits are accounted for, making the firm strongly leveraged to the commodity’s performance.</p><p>Canaccord’s Paul Howard put a 60c price target on the stock last year when it was trading at under 20c, since when CVV’s share price has more than doubled and copper prices have lifted over 40%.</p><figure id="attachment_183637" class="wp-caption alignnone" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-183637"><img decoding="async" class="size-full wp-image-183637" src="https://stockhead.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/image-1200x675-1.png" alt="" width="1200" height="675" /><figcaption id="caption-attachment-183637" class="wp-caption-text">Previous studies show Caravel could be one of Australia’s largest copper producing operations. Pic: CVV</figcaption></figure><h2>The Indian copper boom</h2><p>Given its scale, the 3Mt Caravel will come with a large capital bill, estimated in its 2022 pre-feasibility study update at $1.6bn.</p><p>But there is already strong momentum to potentially secure a joint venture partner for what will be a +billion dollar development, after a subsidiary of Indian conglomerate Adani signed a non-binding MoU establishing a framework for company and project level investments as well as a life of mine 100% offtake for its copper concentrate.</p><p>It comes after Adani opened a 500,000tpa copper smelter in Gujarat last year, one of the world’s largest copper factories. Plans are already in place to double its capacity by early in the next decade as India emerges as the next global growth centre after China.</p><p>That places Caravel in pole position as copper smelters scramble for supply amid a shortage of concentrate. Spot smelter TC/RC charges have turned negative, meaning some smelters are being forced to pay miners to refine their product, an untenable situation.</p><p>“<b></b>It’s not just a smelter. I stood there and watched the copper cathodes being stripped off the starter plates, as they call them, in the actual casting room or in the cathode part of the facility,” Hyma said after visiting the facility last year.</p><p><b></b>“Those cathodes then just get trucked out one door into the next door. They remelt them and they make wire rod and all sorts of down the stream shapes and materials needed for car manufacturing, for example, or for wire or for transmission lines.</p><p><b></b>“All of their copper production is being consumed in India.”</p><p>In India, companies like Adani are “building the Pilbara, which took 50 years, in 25,” Hyma said.</p><p>“T<b></b>hey’re not really interested in us for the existing smelter because we don’t come online fast enough.</p><p>“But for the announced expansion, doubling to a million tonne a year copper production, we are very much of interest to them.”</p><h2>2026 a key year</h2><p>Hyma has stressed that the big focus for Caravel is that every aspect of its DFS is done right, ensuring the project is on a solid footing before a final investment decision is made.</p><p>A host of workstreams are planned this year to push the project along that virtuous path.</p><p>Adani is expected to travel to site at the end of January 2026 for due diligence ahead of the signing of a binding term sheet expected this quarter, with engagement is progressing with export credit agencies to explore financing structures for the eventual project construction.</p><p>The final land purchase option agreement for the Bindi deposit has been executed already, a milestone that lays the foundation for the granting of a mining lease and general purpose leases covering the open pit mine area at the Wheatbelt site.</p><p>An updated JORC reserve is planned for release this year as well as part of mining studies by Byrnecut’s Mining Plus, with engineering studies for the DFS significantly advanced and an environmental review document due for resubmission in mid-2026.</p><p>Caravel is expected to have a unique water source, enhancing the environmental credentials of the project.</p><p>It plans to extract saline groundwater unsuitable for use by farmers which has the added benefit of improving copper recoveries in the mill.</p><p>That saline groundwater kills vegetation after winter rain, meaning Caravel could turn the mine into a net positive for the environment even before its product’s use in EVs and renewable energy is taken into account.</p><p>“The very unique opportunity we have on this project is … by virtue of us drawing down that water table, we’ll be able to over time start to reverse that surface damage that’s occurring to vegetation,” Hyma said.</p><p>“But at the same time, we’re getting the water that we need for the process plant.”</p></div></div></div></div>				</div>
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				</div><p>The post <a href="https://caravelminerals.com.au/as-the-copper-boom-unfolds-caravel-has-the-scale-to-stand-out-from-the-crowd/">As the copper boom unfolds, Caravel has the scale to stand out from the crowd</a> first appeared on <a href="https://caravelminerals.com.au">Caravel Minerals Limited</a>.</p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>Kristie Batten: Caravel heads into 2026 with a copper spring in its step</title>
		<link>https://caravelminerals.com.au/kristie-batten-caravel-heads-into-2026-with-a-copper-spring-in-its-step/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=kristie-batten-caravel-heads-into-2026-with-a-copper-spring-in-its-step</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Caravel Minerals]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 12 Jan 2026 01:47:02 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Announcements]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://caravelminerals.com.au/?p=101640</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Caravel Minerals (ASX:CVV) shares have burst out of the gates in January, hitting the highest level since April 2022.</p>
<p>It comes ahead of a big six months for the copper hopeful, with a potential strategic deal in the works and a definitive feasibility study on the Caravel copper project, 150km north of Perth.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://caravelminerals.com.au/kristie-batten-caravel-heads-into-2026-with-a-copper-spring-in-its-step/">Kristie Batten: Caravel heads into 2026 with a copper spring in its step</a> first appeared on <a href="https://caravelminerals.com.au">Caravel Minerals Limited</a>.</p>]]></description>
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					<div class="pt-plus-text-block-wrapper" data-tp-gsap-textblock="" ><div class="text_block_parallax"><div class="pt_plus_adv_text_block " ><div class="text-content-block"><p><strong><i>One of Australia’s top mining journalists, Kristie Batten, writes for Stockhead every week in her regular column keeping a watchful eye on the movers and shakers of the small cap resources scene.</i></strong></p><p><a href="https://stockhead.com.au/company/caravel-minerals-cvv/"><strong>Caravel Minerals (ASX:CVV)</strong></a> shares have burst out of the gates in January, hitting the highest level since April 2022.</p><p>It comes ahead of a big six months for the copper hopeful, with a potential strategic deal in the works and a definitive feasibility study on the Caravel copper project, 150km north of Perth.</p><p>The project has a substantial resource of 1.27 billion tonnes at 0.24% copper for 3.03 million tonnes of contained copper, as well as 60,600t of contained molybdenum, 895,100 ounces of contained gold and 46.3 million ounces of contained silver.</p><p>What it lacks in grade, it makes up for in scale with Caravel now billed as one of Australia’s largest undeveloped copper projects.</p><p>Based on a 2022 pre-feasibility study, the project has pre-production capital costs of A$1.6-1.7 billion and is set to produce around 62,000tpa of copper at all-in sustaining costs of US$2.37 per pound over a mine life of at least 25 years.</p><p>Using a US$4/lb copper price, the project has a pre-tax net present value of A$2 billion.</p><h3><strong>Project being de-risked</strong></h3><p>A definitive feasibility study is underway and due for completion in the current half.</p><p>In November, Caravel released an updated mine plan for the project, confirming a long-life operation with total material movement of 1.6Bt, comprising 719Mt of ore at an average diluted grade of 0.24% copper and 881Mt of waste material, resulting in a low life-of-mine strip ratio of 1.22:1.</p><p>The 30Mt per annum project is set to produce 1.527Mt of copper, 23,300t of molybdenum metal, 286,000oz of gold and 18.3Moz of silver over 25 years.</p><p>The company said the updated strategic mine plan would reduce initial capital cost requirements and potentially lower operating costs.</p><p>Canaccord Genuity analyst Paul Howard expects the Caravel project to produce around 58,000tpa of payable copper at AISC of US$1.82 per pound of copper, net of by-product credits.</p><p>“Overall, the updated plan confirms Caravel as a technically robust, capital-efficient long-life copper project, capable of sustaining 30Mtpa throughput and leveraging strong early cashflows from high-grade zones,” he said.</p><p>Just before Christmas, Caravel said engineering studies for the DFS were advanced and Mining Plus had been appointed to deliver the DFS mine plan and updated reserve.</p><p>Environmental studies are nearing completion, keeping the company on track to resubmit its final environmental review document in mid-2026.</p><p> </p><h3><strong>Partner talks underway</strong></h3><p>In November, Caravel announced it had signed a non-binding memorandum of understanding with a subsidiary of Indian resources giant Adani Enterprises.</p><p>The MoU will explore a potential investment in Caravel or the project, an offtake agreement, development collaboration and procurement and equipment supply and project funding.</p><p>A due diligence site visit is planned for the end of this month and the parties have agreed to signing a binding term sheet by the end of the March quarter.</p><p>Canaccord’s Howard noted that Adani was building a US$1.2 billion copper smelter in Gujarat, India.</p><p>Caravel has been working with leading banks to structure financing, including export credit agency-supported solutions, alongside traditional debt and equity.</p><p>In late 2023, Caravel received a letter of interest from the Export and Investment Fund of Denmark for potential funding tied to Danish equipment supplier FLSmidth.</p><p>Howard is modelling a 25% project selldown with the balance of capital funded through debt and equity but noted a deal with Adani could materially change that.</p><p>“Should the MoU progress to a binding agreement and culminate in a direct investment by Adani, or other group(s) into Caravel, it would significantly de-risk both the funding pathway and project execution by introducing a strategic, well-capitalised partner with the technical and financial capacity to underpin development, in our view,” he said.</p><h3><strong>Copper on a tear</strong></h3><p>The copper price surged by more than 45% in 2025, setting a new record average price for the year of US$4.52 per pound.</p><p>It’s started 2026 strongly, briefly surpassing US$6/lb for the first time.</p><p>Shares in Caravel are up by 19% since the start of the year.</p><p>Caravel is using a US$4.20/lb price in the DFS but the uplift is good news for project economics.</p><p>Just before Christmas, Argonaut updated its 2026 copper price forecast by 7% to US$4.99/lb and its 2027 forecast by 11% to US$5.50/lb.</p><p>“The demand thematic for copper remains strong, with the current surpluses likely to be eroded during 2026,” head of research Hayden Bairstow said.</p><p>“Once the market shifts to deficit, we expect the timelines for new supply growth will be more closely scrutinised.</p><p>“The increased focus on supply risks is likely to occur in conjunction with the improving demand backdrop, translating to a more positive outlook for copper.”</p><p>Bairstow said decarbonisation and renewable energy infrastructure build-out, combined with rising global electric vehicle sales, continued to support a more bullish long-term outlook for copper.</p><p>“The increased focus on the global battery storage build-out is creating upside risk to consensus demand forecasts,” he said.</p><p>“The spectre of a more aggressive interest rate-cutting cycle is also likely to improve sentiment for the copper price.”</p></div></div></div></div>				</div>
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				</div><p>The post <a href="https://caravelminerals.com.au/kristie-batten-caravel-heads-into-2026-with-a-copper-spring-in-its-step/">Kristie Batten: Caravel heads into 2026 with a copper spring in its step</a> first appeared on <a href="https://caravelminerals.com.au">Caravel Minerals Limited</a>.</p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>Spring Seed Collection Kicks Off on Local Farms for Caravel Copper Project</title>
		<link>https://caravelminerals.com.au/spring-2025-native-seed-collection-on-local-farms/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=spring-2025-native-seed-collection-on-local-farms</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Caravel Minerals]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 19 Nov 2025 01:23:36 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://caravelminerals.com.au/?p=101030</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>This Spring, Caravel Minerals has teamed up with Wheatbelt Natural Resource Management (WNRM) and local Aboriginal ranger groups to collect native seeds on private farmland across the Caravel Copper Project area – a first for many of the properties. Thanks to the outstanding winter rains across the Wheatbelt, native plants are bursting with seed. Rather [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://caravelminerals.com.au/spring-2025-native-seed-collection-on-local-farms/">Spring Seed Collection Kicks Off on Local Farms for Caravel Copper Project</a> first appeared on <a href="https://caravelminerals.com.au">Caravel Minerals Limited</a>.</p>]]></description>
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					<div class="pt-plus-text-block-wrapper" data-tp-gsap-textblock="" ><div class="text_block_parallax"><div class="pt_plus_adv_text_block " ><div class="text-content-block"><p>This Spring, Caravel Minerals has teamed up with Wheatbelt Natural Resource Management (WNRM) and local Aboriginal ranger groups to collect native seeds on private farmland across the Caravel Copper Project area – a first for many of the properties.</p><p>Thanks to the outstanding winter rains across the Wheatbelt, native plants are bursting with seed. Rather than being limited to public reserves (where seed collection usually happens because access is easier), Caravel has worked closely with landowners to open up remnant vegetation on private holdings. This means we’re gathering seed with the exact local genetics needed to bring back healthy native vegetation in an extensively cleared landscape.</p><p>Landowners have welcomed the teams onto their properties, allowing hand-collection of seed from pre-mapped sites using light vehicles and small harvesting tools. No more than 20% of any plant’s seed is taken, so the bush stays strong for the future.</p><p>The seed will be cleaned, stored and used for revegetation programs that form part of Caravel’s environmental approvals – helping offset clearing and restore habitat in the Mortlock Avon catchment.</p><p>Caravel Minerals Managing Director Don Hyma said the program is about more than just seed.</p><p>“It’s early, practical action to rebuild the Wheatbelt’s natural capital using local provenance material, while building relationships with landholders and Traditional Owners,” Don said.</p><p>Noongar Boodja Ranger Jermaine Davis added: “The season is one of the best we’ve seen. Having access to private remnants gives us a much bigger gene pool to work with.”.</p><p>Collections will run through to the end of January 2026, with plenty of notice and on-site coordination for every farm visit.</p><p>A big thank you to all the landowners who’ve said yes – your support is making real environmental positive change possible.</p></div></div></div></div>				</div>
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				</div><p>The post <a href="https://caravelminerals.com.au/spring-2025-native-seed-collection-on-local-farms/">Spring Seed Collection Kicks Off on Local Farms for Caravel Copper Project</a> first appeared on <a href="https://caravelminerals.com.au">Caravel Minerals Limited</a>.</p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>Price premiums in copper M&#038;A show how remaining stocks are under-valued</title>
		<link>https://caravelminerals.com.au/price-premiums-in-copper-ma-show-how-remaining-stocks-are-under-valued/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=price-premiums-in-copper-ma-show-how-remaining-stocks-are-under-valued</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Nick Jerrat]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 14 Nov 2025 01:23:41 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Announcements]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://caravelminerals.com.au/?p=101621</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Last week it was mentioned here that savvy investors were buying the copper dip in anticipation of a price surge and more M &#038; A action.</p>
<p>They are doing all right too as the copper price has rebounded towards record levels of more than $5/lb and things on the corporate front have begun to stir again.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://caravelminerals.com.au/price-premiums-in-copper-ma-show-how-remaining-stocks-are-under-valued/">Price premiums in copper M&A show how remaining stocks are under-valued</a> first appeared on <a href="https://caravelminerals.com.au">Caravel Minerals Limited</a>.</p>]]></description>
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					<div class="pt-plus-text-block-wrapper" data-tp-gsap-textblock="" ><div class="text_block_parallax"><div class="pt_plus_adv_text_block " ><div class="text-content-block"><p>The point is highlighted by Sandfire’s offer for Havilah; Trek stumbles across big WA manganese deposit.</p><p>Last week it was mentioned here that savvy investors were buying the copper dip in anticipation of a price surge and more M &amp; A action.</p><p>They are doing all right too as the copper price has rebounded towards record levels of more than $5/lb and things on the corporate front have begun to stir again.</p><p class="wire-body-3rd-paragraph">Last week copper was $US4.85/lb. It’s now knocking on the door of $US5/lb ($US4.96/lb) which means the price year to date is up some 20% on last (calendar) year’s average.</p><p>While the chatter around the reasons why the red metal is on the march again usually gets linked to the daily politics of the US, there is something much more fundamental driving the metal - a supply deficit.</p><p>As noted last week, BHP estimates copper demand could grow by 1Mtpa each and every year to 2035 in response to demand being powered up by global electrification.</p><p>Meeting that demand is a seemingly impossible task unless copper prices fly up in a major way.</p><p>Anticipating all that, industry players – and a good dash of private equity – have been increasing their copper exposures, be it at the production or advanced project level, through M &amp; A action and/or by forming strategic alliances.</p><p>That the industry and other corporates have front-run the equities market on the copper squeeze is reflected in the big premiums they have paid in recent times to take over ASX names like OZ Minerals, Rex Minerals, New World Resources, MAC and Xanadu.</p><p>They have all popped off at fancy premiums to their pre-bid market values, confirming that while investors are now catching up with the copper thematic, the remaining copper stocks on the ASX have continued to be undervalued.</p><p><b>Sandfire/Havilah:</b></p><p>All that was reflected in Thursday’s market when South Australian copper stock Havilah (ASX:HAV) climbed 48% to 40c for a market cap of $140 million after agreeing to sell Sandfire (ASX:SFR) up to 80% of its 2Mt Kalkaroo copper project for $210m.</p><p>The earn-in is in two stages comprising $105m upfront (70% scrip and 20% cash) and a further $105m on completion of a new feasibility study into Kalkaroo’s development. Sandfire will also spend $30m on regional exploration under a strategic exploration alliance.</p><p>Clearly then Havilah has been under-valued by the market something chronic. That is despite it having once had a strategic alliance with OZ Minerals that recognised Kalkaroo as a leading development candidate.</p><p>But BHP walked away from that arrangement when it acquired OZ on the basis that it had enough SA copper with its Olympic Dam, Prominent Hill and Carrapateena mines, and the Oak Dam discovery.</p><p>Kalkaroo is also not BHP scale. But it is to Sandfire with its $7.5 billion market cap. It marks Sandfire’s return to operating in Australia after it pushed into copper in Spain and Africa ahead of its DeGrussa mine in WA coming to an end.</p><p>Kalkaroo is a potential 20 year-plus project likely capable of producing 45,000tpa of copper and 100,000 oz of gold annually, with cobalt credits and lots of exploration upside.</p><p><b>Caravel:</b></p><p>One of the clear signals that copper supplies are already under pressure has been the collapse in the treatment and refining charges for the processing of copper concentrates by custom smelters.</p><p>The charges have fallen to less than zero in some cases and are the lowest in living memory as the smelters compete for concentrate flows.</p><p>That has just played out on the ASX with Indian conglomerate Adani striking a strategic alliance with Caravel (ASX:CVV) over its 3Mt namesake copper project in Western Australia’s central wheatbelt.</p><p>Adani needs long-term concentrate supplies to feed its newly built 500,000tpa Kutch smelter in the western state of Gujarat. It also has plans to expand the smelter to 1Mtpa, such is the demand for domestic supplies of copper.</p><p>Caravel in the meantime is well advanced on a definitive feasibility study into the development of its project, a low-grade but bulk tonnage opportunity where economies of scale can deliver margins that triumph over the low-grade (0.24%).</p><p>An updated preliminary feasibility study in 2023 arrived at a $1.67 billion development producing 65,000tpa of copper along with molybdenum, gold and silver. Using a $US4/lb copper price assumption and a US72c exchange rate, the pre-tax net present value (7%) was put at $2 billion.</p><p>Plug in $US5/lb copper and the NPV would be more like $3.8bn. There will be changes in the DFS, but the point is made about the project’s value creation potential.</p><p>Caravel was a 24c stock for a market cap of $140m on Thursday. Clearly the market continues to hold back on the stock because of the capex bill, and the low grade, even if it is not so low-grade in a $$US5/lb-plus copper market.</p><p>Adani, which is obviously now deeply enmeshed in the copper market, obviously thinks differently, hence the non-binding strategic alliance.</p><p>The alliance envisages collaboration between the companies on funding to advance Caravel towards a final investment decision in 2026 and the negotiation of a potential life of-mine offtake agreement covering 100% of Caravel’s production for processing at the Kutch smelter.</p><p>At the same time, Caravel is working with leading banks to structure a financing package, including what could be available from export credit agencies, alongside traditional debt and equity. Financing is now all that much easier with Adani’s presence.</p><p><b>Alma/Canterbury:</b></p><p>Another low-grade but big copper project on the other side of the country to Caravel is also coming into its own thanks to the heightened interest in potential large scale and long life copper projects.</p><p>It is the 2Mt and growing Briggs copper project in central Queensland, a joint venture between Alma Metals (ASX:ALM) and Canterbury Resources (ASX:CBY) under which Alma is earning a 70% interest by spending a further $7m before June 2031.</p><p>The pair have tiny market caps – Alma $15m (0.7c share ) and Canterbury $6.5m (2.4c). Importantly they have just committed to a pre-feasibility study into the project which is wonderfully located 60km from Gladstone.</p><p>The commitment follows the completion of a scoping study, the key findings of which can’t be reported because the proportion of the indicated resources was not high enough. But the partners did point to an “aspirational”’’ mining rate of 30Mtpa.</p><p>There it is again - a low-grade but bulk tonnage opportunity where economies of scale could deliver margins that triumph over low-grade, with multi-decade production potential.</p><p>It is the very stuff that attracted Adani to Caravel. By the by, Caravel shares office space in Perth with Alma and Alasdair Cooke is on the board of both.</p><p><b>Trek:</b></p><p>Investors in junior explorers are happy to see a solid share price gain whatever the underlying reason.</p><p>And so it was on Thursday for Trek Metals (ASX:TMK) which gained 1.6c or 38% to 5.8c, taking its market cap to $35 million.</p><p>Investors in the stock are there for the Christmas Creek project in WA’s Kimberley region. It’s a former Newmont project with big-time gold potential in the rocks beneath extensive soil cover.</p><p>Trek has been working away at teasing out that potential both with high-tech wizardry and good old-fashioned reconnaissance work like walking the ground, pick in hand.</p><p>On one of the pick-in-hand excursions, outcrops of manganese were encountered and are now interpreted to be part of a large hydrothermal system, with rock chip assays returning super high grades of up to 58% manganese.</p><p>Given the grades and the 750m strike of the cluster of outcrops before they dive under cover, and because the style of mineralisation is thought to be similar to the world-scale Woodie Woodie deposits in the Pilbara – Trek is now preparing a drill program at the virgin prospect.</p></div></div></div></div>				</div>
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				</div><p>The post <a href="https://caravelminerals.com.au/price-premiums-in-copper-ma-show-how-remaining-stocks-are-under-valued/">Price premiums in copper M&A show how remaining stocks are under-valued</a> first appeared on <a href="https://caravelminerals.com.au">Caravel Minerals Limited</a>.</p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>Community and Stakeholders</title>
		<link>https://caravelminerals.com.au/communityand-stakeholders/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=communityand-stakeholders</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Caravel Minerals]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 06 Jun 2021 08:49:51 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Announcements]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[DFS]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[stakeholders]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>We prioritise being a valued member of the communities the company has worked with during the past decade and a half of exploration in the Shires of Wongan Ballidu, Victoria Plains and Goomalling.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://caravelminerals.com.au/communityand-stakeholders/">Community and Stakeholders</a> first appeared on <a href="https://caravelminerals.com.au">Caravel Minerals Limited</a>.</p>]]></description>
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									<h5 class="p1">We aim to be a valued member of the local community.</h5><p class="p1">Our team has developed projects in Australia and around the world and many of us have lived and worked in regional WA for much of our lives, so we understand the importance of the local communities. We place a high priority on being a valued member of the communities the company has worked with during the past decade and a half of exploration in the Shires of Wongan Ballidu, Victoria Plains and Goomalling.</p><p class="p1">The pre-feasibility study phase will investigate how the proposed mining project can be planned and operated most compatibly with the surrounding environment, and agricultural activities and also bring benefits to the nearby towns and communities through improved services and other opportunities.</p><p class="p1">The company conducts its current field activities from an operational base in Calingiri. Where ever possible local staff and contractors are used to assist in these activities.</p><p class="p1">Caravel Minerals has been operating in the region since 2004 and is fortunate to have gotten to know many local people over its 15-year history.</p><p class="p1">We sincerely thank you for your support.</p>								</div>
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						Community Factsheet					</h2>
				
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						2023 Definitive Feasibility Update					</div>
				
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				</div><p>The post <a href="https://caravelminerals.com.au/communityand-stakeholders/">Community and Stakeholders</a> first appeared on <a href="https://caravelminerals.com.au">Caravel Minerals Limited</a>.</p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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