10 April 2024
GOLDSTONE RESOURCES
LIMITED
("GoldStone" or the
"Company")
Final Results for the year
ended 31 December 2022
GoldStone Resources Limited (AIM:
GRL) announces its final results for the year ended 31 December
2022.
The Annual Report and Accounts for
the year ended 31 December 2022 will shortly be available to view
and download in full on the Company's website at
www.goldstoneresources.com. Hard copies of the Annual Report
and Accounts are available on request.
For further information, please contact:
GoldStone Resources Limited
|
|
Emma Priestley
|
Tel: +44 (0)1534 487
757
|
Strand Hanson Limited
|
|
James Dance / James
Bellman
|
Tel: +44 (0)20 7409
3494
|
S. P. Angel Corporate Finance LLP
|
|
Ewan Leggat / Charlie
Bouverat
|
Tel: +44 (0)20 3470 0501
|
St Brides Partners Ltd
Susie Geliher
|
Tel: +44 (0)20 7236
1177
|
|
|
Notes to Editors: About GoldStone Resources
Limited
GoldStone Resources Limited (AIM:
GRL) is an AIM quoted mining and development company with projects
in Ghana that range from grassroots exploration to
production.
The Company is focused on
developing the Akrokeri-Homase project in south-western Ghana,
which hosts a JORC Code compliant 602,000oz gold resource at an
average grade of 1.77 g/t. The existing resource is confined
to a 4km zone of the Homase Trend, including Homase North, Homase
Pit and Homase South.
The project hosts two former
mines, the Akrokerri Ashanti Mine Ltd, which produced 75,000 oz
gold at 24 g/t recovered grade in the early 1900s, and the Homase
Pit which AngloGold Ashanti developed in 2002/03 producing 52,000
oz gold at 2.5 g/t recovered. Production is currently
focussed on the Homase Mine however it is the Company's intention
to build a portfolio of high-quality gold projects in Ghana, with a
particular focus on the highly prospective Ashanti Gold
Belt.
CHAIR'S REPORT
It gives me great pleasure to
present my first statement as Chair of GoldStone, having assumed
the position in January 2024. I join as Chair at a pivotal time for
GoldStone, as we look to solidify and extend our position as an
emerging gold producer focussed on the famously productive Ashanti
Gold Belt in Ghana. 2022 was a year of significant progress
for GoldStone, with the commencement of commercial gold production,
but also a year of challenge as we looked to remedy a number of
technical issues in order to optimise production and move towards
profitability. As shareholders will be aware, the publication
of this report is now over nine months past our intended release
date and so it is appropriate to also comment on the post period
developments for the Company. As such, 2023 could be defined
as year of reflection and innovation as we looked to address the
stubborn agglomeration issues that we have experienced since
operations commenced at our initial production asset, the Homase
Mine in southwest Ghana.
During the year under review,
GoldStone produced and sold 5,155 troy ounces of gold from Homase,
realising an average price of US$1,727 per troy ounce for revenues
of US$8.9m. From this gold production, gold loan repayments
were made via the delivery of 675 troy ounces to Asia Investments
Management Services Limited ("AIMSL").
As shareholders will be aware,
this production figure would have been higher were it not for the
estimated 192 troy ounces of gold, amounting to some US$350,000,
that was stolen in a robbery, as announced on 29 June 2022.
This was a serious incident for GoldStone, and one which
highlighted various areas for improvement in terms of our security
solution in-country. Investigations relating to the robbery
are on-going, with the target of pursuing charges on those
responsible, and all necessary changes have been made to our
contract security to ensure that the highest levels of safety and
security are enforced.
We were disappointed not to reach
our 2022 production target of 7,000 troy ounces of gold, with the
known complications of the heap leach operation which led to this
shortfall, there are some 2,000 ounces remaining within the
heap, classed as GIP (Gold in Process),
but there will be limited recovery from this GIP gold until a new
process method is introduced. As referred
to previously, GoldStone has been working to ameliorate some
persistent agglomeration issues, which, together with inclement
weather during H2 2022, negatively impacted gold recovery rates and
affected the stacking of the material. The Company continues
to test and assess agglomeration methods to resolve and improve
recovery factor.
Given the lower than forecast
production for the year, the Board were mindful of the importance
of preserving cash within the business for working capital
purposes. Accordingly, during the year, certain directors agreed to
convert US$239,250 of outstanding fees, accrued and unpaid to 30
June 2022, into equity. The Board's continued, and indeed,
increased alignment with shareholders, is a clear signal of both
their commitment to improving the financial performance of the
Company and their confidence in the quality of our
assets.
Post Period Developments
During 2023, the team on site have
been working tirelessly to improve the performance of the dry
plant, particularly the screening and application of cement into
the agglomeration plant. Mining and staking recommenced in June
2023 and the cashflow projections are based upon increasing the
production and staking, which will improve in 2024, and which in
turn will improve revenues. Since the start of 2023, gold produced
and sold amounted to approximately 1,250 ounces of gold
bullion.
The Company announced in January
2023 that it had raised £2,400,000 via the issue of convertible
loan notes and has invested in the necessary equipment
and infrastructure to improve the long-term production profile of
the Homase Mine. The prime objective
is to improve the mine's production profile and to overcome the
issues that hampered production during 2022. I look forward
to reporting further on this in due course.
In April 2024 the Company was able
to bolster its financial position through a £1.82m subscription
for, in aggregate 182,000,000 new ordinary shares (the
"Subscription Shares") at a subscription price of 1 penny per
ordinary share (the "Subscription Price"). The Subscription Shares
shall have one warrant attached with an exercise price of 2 pence
for a period of 24 months from the date of admission to trading of
the Subscription Shares ("Admission") (the "Warrants") (together,
the "Fundraising"). This fundraising will support the Company
and its new operational management team, supplied by Nguvu Mining
Limited ("Nguvu") as part of the Standstill Agreement announced on
3 January 2024. Given Nguvu is an 11.9 per cent. shareholder in the
Company and a company of which I am a director and the majority
shareholder, this arrangement will be subject to a separate
agreement which will constitute a Related Party Transaction
pursuant to AIM Rule 13.
I would like to take this
opportunity to thank the GoldStone management team, some of whom
have been working in difficult conditions for many months at a
time; their dedication and commitment to making a success of this
project is commendable. I would also like to thank my
predecessor, Bill Trew, for his contributions to the Company, who
as of 1 April 2024 stood down from the Board of Directors.
Above all, I would like to thank our very loyal and patient
shareholders for their continued support. The road to gold
production is rarely a straight or easy one, however with the
Homase Mine in production, and with great exploration potential,
and a defined plan to improve our production profile over the
long-term, I think we are in a solid position to deliver growth in
the future.
Angela List
Chair
Chief Executive Officer's REPORT
2022 was a landmark year for
GoldStone and marked our transition from developer to gold
producer. As investors will be aware, our ambition for
GoldStone was to deliver maiden production and cash generation in
as short a timeframe, and to this end, we have been
successful. Our experiences throughout 2022 and 2023 have
provided us with important information through which to optimise
and enhance our production profile, and we are implementing this
with the objective of increasing total ounces and lowering our cost
of production over the coming years. In tandem with this, we
are also working hard to increase our total resource inventory in
order to deliver a long-life, high-grade and high-margin gold
operation based on our priority targets at Homase and
Akrokeri.
GoldStone's production journey
started in November 2021 with our first pour, following the
construction of the initial stage of the mine, which included a
crushing, sizing, agglomeration and stacking unit, three heap leach
pads, a carbon-in-column plant, and an elution and gold room.
The gold pour was a technical success; however, it highlighted the
need for remedial work to improve recoveries due to agglomeration
issues, which has been a theme throughout 2022 and 2023.
Our work has focussed on
performing detailed test work and cost analysis to further
understand the leach kinetics in order to optimise the recovery of
the remaining contained gold in the heap. This work informed the
reconfiguration of the agglomeration and crushing circuit to handle
the excess clay encountered and the greater than expected amount of
silt originating from the oxide orebody's fragile phyllitic
content. A modified screening system was designed and built to
control the feed sizing, with the fines (<3mm), which represent
approximately 20% of the ore body, being removed, which is fed to a
gravity recovery circuit.
This work had a marginally
positive impact on production, however recoveries still sat at a
sub-optimal level of approximately 65%. The Company continues
to test and assess agglomeration methods to seek to improve
recovery. Testwork is showing very high recovery potential (in
excess of 80%), and the Company will continue to make further
improvements to the dry plant, particularly the screening and
application of cement into the agglomeration plant, to improve
recovery rates.
Notwithstanding the processing
challenges experienced during 2022 and 2023, external factors,
including supply shortages, volatile currency markets and
spiralling costs for consumables, all played a part in the
Company's financial performance. In light of this, Homase has
not yet achieved consistent positive site-level cash flow, with an
average All-in Cost ("AIC") of US$1,369 per ounce average for 2022,
which is primarily due to a lower-than-expected production rate and
ongoing inflationary pressures, in particular in relation to fuel,
spares, consumables and reagents.
The Company is taking
proportionate steps to improve production at the Homase Mine, which
have been implemented during 2023 and will continue through 2024
following the recent announcement of a £1.82 million, (before
expenses) conditional fundraising in April 2024, and building on
the injection of capital in January 2023 through the issue of
convertible loan notes to the sum of US$3 million (£2.4
million).
Alongside its strategy to improve
its production profile, a core pillar of GoldStone's growth
strategy remains the expansion of its mineralised footprint and
resource inventory. As such, in August 2022, GoldStone
commenced a diamond drilling programme at Akrokeri, the main focus
for the GoldStone exploration team. Initial drill results were
received in September 2022, followed by the full assay results in
April 2023. These results, announced 5 April 2023,
reconfirmed the Company's belief that the Akrokeri mineralisation
occupies a significant structural corridor that extends to both the
south and north of the historical underground mine. A
particular highlight was the identification of a wide mineralised
lode hosting gold at 4.1m @ 11.01 g/t, including 1m @ 41.04 g/t in
hole 22AKDD002.
Significant intercepts from the
2022/23 diamond drilling include:
·
22AKDD001: 6.50 metres @ 1.63 g/t from 7.7
metres, including 3.5 metres @ 2.35 g/t,
·
22AKDD002: 4.10 metres @ 11.01g/t from 46.0
metres, including 1 metre @ 41.04g/t,
·
22AKDD003: 3.60 metres @ 5.77g/t from 69.4
metres, including 1 metre @ 12.06g/t,
·
22AKDD006: 5.74 metres @ 3.43g/t from 55.66
metres, including 1.1 metres @ 15.25g/t,
·
22AKDD008: 3.00 metres @ 3.08g/t from 34.8
metres, including 1.0 metre @ 5.23g/t,
·
22AKDD008: 3.70 metres @ 2.54g/t from 72.6
metres, including 2.2 metres @ 4.03g/t,
·
22AKDD009: 4.80 metres @ 7.31 g/t from surface,
including 1.0 metre @ 25.8 g/t,
·
22AKDD015: 1.0 metre @ 4.53 g/t from 61.9
metres,
·
22AKDD015: 1.10 metres @ 11.23 g/t from 95.7
metres, including 0.5 metre @ 20.01 g/t,
·
22AKDD016: 12.0 metres @ 0.93 g/t from 79.3
metres, including 1.6 metres @ 2.97 g/t, and
·
22AKDD019: 2.80 metres @ 1.84 g/t from 72.0
metres, including 2.2 metres @ 2.21g/t
The Company also launched a soil-
and auger-sampling programme during 2022 which targeted two areas,
Esuaya in the north-east and Adubriem West, and a targeted augering
programme was also undertaken over an area to the south-west of the
known Homase Trend, with a total of 579 samples
collected.
The results were combined with
historical data to update the geochemical anomalies identified in
2018 and Q1 2023, and further confirmed the presence of multiple
exploration targets which are yet to be fully evaluated.
These new targets are being prioritised for follow-up work and the
Company is focused on evaluating these systematically, with the
objective being to expand the mineral resource that is currently
being exploited at Homase.
The results received from this
most recent exploration programme, together with additional
exploration work undertaken over the past three years, provides
significant evidence of our ability to materially grow our total
mineral resource in the future, thus extending mining operations in
the coming years.
Corporate and Financial Review
Losses from operations for the 12
months to 31 December 2022 were US$674k (2021: loss
US$1,523k).
The financial statements at year
end show the Group's balance sheet, with net assets standing at
US$12.8 million against net assets of US$16.0 million at the end of
the previous year.
Cash and cash equivalents as at 31
December 2022 were US$113k (2021: US$337k).
Post period end, on 27 January
2023, GoldStone announced that it had issued convertible loan notes
to Blue Gold International Limited ("BGL" or "Blue Gold") in the
nominal amount of £2,400,000 and which are due for redemption on 30
November 2024. At the election of BGL, the Loan Notes
(together with accrued interest to date) may be converted (in whole
or in part) at any time prior to redemption into new ordinary
shares of 1 penny each in the capital of the Company ("Ordinary
Shares") at a conversion price of £0.0325 per share.
BGL has also received warrants to
subscribe for up to 60,000,000 Ordinary Shares at a price of £0.04
per share, exercisable at any time until 26 January
2025.
The Group prepares regular
management accounts and financial forecasts to monitor and manage
working capital and funding requirements going forward. The
accounts and forecasts are regularly reviewed and challenged by the
Board.
Warrants
The Company announced, on 23 June
2022, the exercise of 14,000,000 warrants to subscribe for new
Ordinary Shares at a price of 3.0 pence per share, which provided
£420,000 of additional funding to the Company.
In addition, Nguvu Holdings
Limited (formerly known as BCM Investments Limited) ("Nguvu"), a
company in which Angela List, a director of the Company, is a
director of and a majority shareholder, gave notice to the Company
in late May 2022 of its intention to exercise 6,000,000 of the
12,000,000 warrants it held to subscribe for Ordinary Shares at a
price of 3.0 pence per share (the "Nguvu Warrants"). Nguvu was
unable to provide a signed notice of exercise before the Company
entered into a close period pending publication of the annual
report and accounts of the Company for the year ended 31 December
2021 and therefore, as the Nguvu Warrants had an expiry date of 22
June 2022, the Board of the Company resolved to extend the exercise
period of the Nguvu Warrants by two weeks to expire at midnight on
6 July 2022. Nguvu subsequently exercised 6,000,000 warrants
providing £180,000 of additional funding to the Company.
Post Period Developments
As outlined above, 2022 and indeed
2023 were defined by significant operational developments, whilst
being simultaneously curtailed by persistent technical challenges
and macro-level issues including high inflation and supply chain
problems. Whilst some of these technical challenges are yet
to be completely remedied, I am confident that we are now in a much
stronger position to realise our production
ambitions.
On 3 January 2024, the Company
announced a Standstill Agreement with AIMSL in respect of its gold
loan agreement. This standstill agreement, which was
necessary due to the inability to complete a negotiation on an
extension within the appropriate timeframe, provides the Company
with the potential to defer repayment of the gold loan until 29
June 2024. The standstill agreement has subsequently been extended
to 31 December 2025. The standstill agreement also set out to
appoint Angela List as the Chair, and for an operational management
team to be mobilised to GoldStone's operations. The
Standstill Agreement allowed for the Company to renegotiate the
terms, announced 10 April 2024, which was in conjunction with the
Company announcing it has conditionally raised £1.82 million before
expenses by way of the Subscription of, in aggregate, 182,000,000
new ordinary shares of 1 penny par value each in the capital of the
Company ("Ordinary Shares") at a price of 1 penny per share
Subscription Shares together with one warrant per Subscription
Share to subscribe for a further new Ordinary Share at an exercise
price of 2 pence during the period of 24 months from the date of
Admission (the "Warrants").
The Company has agreed with AIMSL
in respect of the Gold Loan Agreement to extend the Standstill
Period under terms of the Standstill Agreement dated 29 December
2023, to 31 December 2025. AIMSL have also agreed to convert
and settle the interest accrued to 31 December 2023 by the issue of
ordinary Shares of £0.01 each in the capital of the Company (the
"Conversion Shares"), which will be in addition to the
fundraise.
The net proceeds of the
Fundraising will be used for general working capital purposes and
to progress the Company's strategy of developing and improving
production at its Homase Mine in Ghana, and during the first
quarter of 2024, a new operational management team have been
identified and upon the successful fundraise, are expected to have
both a meaningful impact on the Company's operations and ability to
ramp up production.
Risk management
The Board has identified the
following as being principal strategic and operational risks (in no
particular order):
a. development and mining
Development and mining for natural
resources is speculative and involves significant
risk.
Planned production schedules may
not be achieved as a result of unforeseen operational problems,
machinery malfunctions or other disruptions. Operating costs
and profits for commercial production therefore remain subject to
variation, such as gold prices or not achieving the expected
recovery rates. Inflation and supply chain issues, which are
affectively the global economy, may also impact on recovery
rates.
The Board are evaluating each
stage of the development and mining of the Group's projects, site
by site, in order to mitigate as far as possible these risks
inherent in production. Use of modern technology and
electronic tools assist in reducing risk in this area. Good
employee relations are also key in reducing the exposure to labour
disputes. The Group is committed to following sound
environmental guidelines and practice and is keenly aware of the
issues surrounding each individual project.
b. country and political
GoldStone's projects are in
Ghana. Emerging market economies could be subject to greater
risks including legal, regulatory, economic and political risks and
are potentially subject to rapid change.
The Board routinely monitors
political and regulatory developments in Ghana. The Ghanaian
Government continues to be supportive towards the mining sector,
including the improved policing of small-scale mining operations,
thus ensuring controlled management of neighbouring
areas.
In addition, the Group actively
engages in dialogue with relevant Government representatives in
order to keep abreast of all key legal and regulatory developments
applicable to areas of interest. GoldStone maintains internal
processes to ensure that it is wholly compliant with all relevant
regulations in order to maintain its licences.
It is noted that security risk is
inherent with a business operating in an emerging economy such as
Ghana, particularly for a producing gold mine. The Company is
increasing its engagement with the government and its governing
bodies to monitor the emerging country risk in order to ascertain
any particular risks or trends that can be identified and mitigated
to seek to ensure the security of our people and our
business.
The Company has increased its
focus on security and management plans and is continuously
monitoring any security issues, threats and emerging potential
issues through global and national advisory services, government
security intelligence and local engagement, to establish an
appropriate and effective security approach that is also aligned
with the Voluntary Principles of Security and Human
Rights.
c. social, safety and environmental
The Group's success depends upon
its social, safety and environmental performance as failures may
lead to delays or suspensions of its activities. The Group
takes its responsibilities in these areas seriously and monitors
its performance across these areas on a regular
basis.
The Group experienced no
fatalities for the 2022 financial year and no lost-time injuries,
which contributes to the Group's commendable safety performance.
The Group has set out to create an environment of zero harm
by creating a safe and healthy workplace and managing our
activities in a way that eliminates accidents, minimises health and
safety risks and promotes excellence in the performance of our
operations.
As the Homase Mine increases
production, the Group is strengthening its relationships with the
communities living within the concession areas and close to the
projects. The immediate focus for each of the villages within
the licences, has been sanitation and drinking water, and improving
the school facilities, maintaining the buildings and providing
school uniforms. The Group continues to build on the
community relationships to assist the smallholder farmers and
ensuring a "community first" approach when recruiting. These
schemes benefit both the communities and the investors in which the
Group will be operating.
d. financial
AIMSL who hold the secured Gold
Loan of US$3.0 million, supported the Group by agreeing to a number
of deferments of interest payments throughout 2021 and 2022,
continues to support the Company. Post Period End, as announced on
3 January 2024, the Company had received notification that a
standstill agreement for a further 6 months, to the 29 June 2024
had been agreed, this has subsequently been extended to 31 December
2025. The conditions which have been agreed to, included a
repayment plan to repay the loan, a change in leadership of the
Chairman and operational team at the Homase mine. The
Standstill Agreement allowed for the Company to renegotiate the
terms, announced 10 April 2024, whereby, an agreement has been made
with AIMSL in respect of the Gold Loan Agreement to extend the
Standstill Period under terms of the Standstill Agreement dated 29
December 2023, to 31 December 2025. AIMSL have also agreed to
convert and settle the interest accrued to 31 December 2023 by the
issue of ordinary Shares.
This was in conjunction with the
Company announcing it has conditionally raised £1.82 million before
expenses by way of a Subscription of, in aggregate, 182,000,000 new
ordinary shares of 1 penny par value each in the capital of the
Company at a price of 1 penny per share, together with one warrant
per ordinary share to subscribe for a further new Ordinary Share at
an exercise price of 2 pence during the period of 24 months from
the date of Admission.
The net proceeds of the
Fundraising will be used for general working capital purposes and
to progress the Company's strategy of developing and improving
production at its Homase Mine in Ghana.
Emma Priestley
Chief Executive Officer
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL POSITION AS AT 31
DECEMBER 2022
in united states dollars
|
note
|
|
|
31 December
2022
|
|
31 December
2021
|
Assets
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
non-current assets
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
property, plant and
equipment
|
9
|
|
|
19,967,587
|
|
21,280,257
|
intangible assets - exploration and
evaluation
|
10
|
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
total non-current assets
|
|
|
|
19,967,587
|
|
21,280,257
|
current assets
inventory
|
13
|
|
|
114,376
|
|
1,959,083
|
trade and other
receivables
|
12
|
|
|
870,468
|
|
257,013
|
cash and cash
equivalents
|
14
|
|
|
113,312
|
|
336,524
|
total current assets
|
|
|
|
1,098,156
|
|
2,552,620
|
total assets
|
|
|
|
21,065,743
|
|
23,832,877
|
Equity
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
share capital - ordinary
shares
|
16
|
|
|
6,836,778
|
|
6,383,213
|
share capital - deferred
shares
|
16
|
|
|
6,077,013
|
|
6,077,013
|
share premium
|
16
|
|
|
35,143,117
|
|
33,535,384
|
foreign exchange reserve
|
16
|
|
|
(5,930,054)
|
|
(1,332,396)
|
capital contribution
reserve
|
16
|
|
|
555,110
|
|
555,110
|
share options reserve
|
16, 18
|
|
|
-
|
|
3,535,197
|
accumulated deficit
|
16
|
|
|
(29,897,222)
|
|
(32,758,006)
|
total equity
|
|
|
|
12,784,742
|
|
15,995,515
|
Liabilities
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
non-current liabilities
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
provision for
rehabilitation
|
15
|
|
|
821,622
|
|
901,284
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
total non-current liabilities
|
|
|
|
821,622
|
|
901,284
|
current liabilities
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
trade and other payables
|
20
|
|
|
3,647,352
|
|
1,395,221
|
Borrowings
|
19
|
|
|
3,812,027
|
|
5,540,857
|
total current liabilities
|
|
|
|
7,459,379
|
|
6,936,078
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
total liabilities
|
|
|
|
8,281,001
|
|
7,837,362
|
total equity and liabilities
|
|
|
|
21,065,743
|
|
23,832,877
|
The accounting policies and notes
form part of these consolidated financial statements. The
consolidated financial statements were approved by the Board of
directors on
Signed on behalf of the Board of
directors.
Emma Priestley
chief executive officer
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME FOR THE YEAR
ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2022
In united states dollars
|
|
note
|
year ended
31 December
2022
|
|
year ended
31 December
2021
|
year ended
31 December
2018
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
cash flow from operating
activities
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
operating loss for the year before
and after tax
|
|
|
(674,413)
|
|
(1,523,095)
|
(1,014,322)
|
adjusted for:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
- finance costs
|
|
8
|
511,533
|
|
728,887
|
|
- depreciation
|
|
9
|
272,404
|
|
71,300
|
11,151
|
- gold
loan settlement
|
|
|
(1,191,427)
|
|
-
|
|
- director and senior management fees
|
|
|
245,839
|
|
-
|
|
- foreign exchange differences
|
|
|
812,410
|
|
164,170
|
-
|
- changes in working capital
|
|
|
645,290
|
|
(462,499)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
net cash generated by/(used in) operating
activities
|
|
|
621,636
|
|
(1,021,237)
|
(602,813)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
cash flow from investing
activities
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
capitalisation of exploration
costs
|
|
10
|
-
|
|
(746,640)
|
(968,894)
|
acquisition of property, plant and
equipment
|
|
9
|
(1,593,787)
|
|
(4,872,653)
|
(40,882)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
net cash used in investing activities
|
|
|
(1,593,787)
|
|
(5,619,293)
|
(1,009,776)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
cash flow from financing
activities
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
repayment from bond
issues
|
|
19
|
-
|
|
(300,000)
|
|
proceeds from share
issues
|
|
16
|
748,939
|
|
6,575,670
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
net cash generated from financing
activities
|
|
|
748,939
|
|
6,275,670
|
324,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
net decrease in cash and cash equivalents
|
|
|
(223,212)
|
|
(364,860)
|
(1,288,589)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
cash and cash equivalents at
beginning of the year
|
|
14
|
336,524
|
|
701,384
|
1,626,057
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
cash and cash equivalents at end of the
year
|
|
14
|
113,312
|
|
336,524
|
337,468
|
in united states dollars
|
year
ended 31 December 2021
|
cash
flows
|
other
non-cash changes
|
year ended
31 December
2022
|
net cash:
|
|
|
|
|
cash at bank and in hand
|
336,524
|
(223,212)
|
-
|
113,312
|
|
|
|
|
|
debt:
|
|
|
|
|
shareholder loan
|
(742,587)
|
-
|
742,587
|
-
|
gold loan
|
(3,769,500)
|
-
|
863,238
|
(2,906,262)
|
derivative
|
(728,770)
|
-
|
(176,995)
|
(905,765)
|
bonds
|
(300,000)
|
-
|
300,000
|
-
|
|
(5,540,857)
|
-
|
1,728,830
|
(3,812,027)
|
|
|
|
|
|
net debt:
|
(5,204,333)
|
(223,212)
|
1,728,830
|
(3,698,715)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Other non-cash changes relate to
the repayment of the shareholder loan and bonds via the issue of
new Ordinary Shares in the year and the gold loan is repaid out of
gold sales; see note 19 for further details.
The accounting policies and notes
form part of these consolidated financial statements.
NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL
STATEMENTS
1. reporting
entity
The consolidated financial
statements for the year ended 31 December 2022 (the "financial
statements") comprise GoldStone Resources Limited (the "Company")
and its subsidiaries, set out in note 23, (together referred to as
the "Group").
The Company is quoted on the AIM
market of the London Stock Exchange and is incorporated and
domiciled in Jersey, Channel Islands. The address of its
registered office is 2nd Floor, International House, 41
The Parade, St. Helier, Jersey, JE2 3QQ. The Company's
principal activity is that of a holding company. The Group's
principal activity is exploration and mining of gold and associated
elements.
2.
basis of preparation
(a) statement of compliance and basis of
preparation
The Group's annual report is for
the year ended 31 December 2022 and includes the consolidated
financial statements of the Group prepared in accordance with
UK-adopted International Accounting Standards.-
The consolidated financial statements have been prepared using
accounting policies set out in note 3 which are consistent with all
applicable UK-adopted International Accounting
Standards.
The consolidated financial
statements have been prepared under the historical cost convention
except for the treatment of share-based payments and
derivatives. The consolidated financial statements are
presented in United States Dollars ("$").
The preparation of consolidated
financial statements in conformity with UK-adopted International
Accounting Standards requires management to make judgements,
estimates and assumptions that affect the application of accounting
policies and reported amounts in the consolidated financial
statements. The areas involving a higher degree of judgement
or complexity, or areas where assumptions or estimates are
significant to the consolidated financial statements, are disclosed
in note 2(d).
(b) going concern
The financial statements have been
prepared assuming the Group and Company will continue as a going
concern for at least twelve months from the date of approval of
these financial statements. In assessing whether the going
concern assumption is appropriate, the directors have taken into
account all available information for the foreseeable future; in
particular for the 12 months from the date of approval of these
financial statements. This assessment included consideration
of future revenues as the Group has recommenced gold production,
and is building production up with existing cash resources and
available facilities.
The Group had available cash of
US$113k as at 31 December 2022 (2021: US$337k).
AIMSL, who hold the secured Gold
Loan of US$3.0 million, supported the Group by agreeing to a number
of deferments of interest payments throughout 2021 and 2022,
continues to support the Company. Post Period End, the Company has
entered into a standstill agreement to 31 December 2025,
the conditions which have been agreed to,
included a repayment plan to repay the loan from month 7, a change
in leadership of the Chairman and operational team at the Homase
mine. The Standstill Agreement allowed for the Company to
renegotiate the terms, announced 10 April 2024, whereby, an
agreement has been made with AIMSL in respect of the Gold Loan
Agreement to extend the Standstill Period under terms of the
Standstill Agreement dated 29 December 2023, to 31 December
2025. AIMSL have also agreed to convert and settle the
interest accrued to 31 December 2023 by the issue of new Ordinary
Shares
The Company continues to actively
pursue funding proposals and/or similar potential solutions to
enable the Company to seek to extend, renegotiate or refinance the
outstanding secured Gold Loan and the provision of additional
working capital, but there can be no guarantee that such an
agreement can be reached or additional working capital provided. On
10 April 2024, the Company announced an extension to the Standstill
Agreement, to 31 December 2025, and agreed
to convert and settle the interest accrued to 31 December 2023 by
the issue of ordinary Shares. If the Gold Loan cannot be repaid or rescheduled prior to 31 December 2025,
security over the Company's primary assets could potentially be
enforced.
The Company's Ordinary Shares will
remain suspended from trading on AIM until such time as it has
satisfied the requirements of AIM Rule 19 with respect to
publication of its 2022 Accounts and AIM Rule 18 with regard to
publication of its interim results for the six-month period to 30
June 2023, which were required to be published by 30 September
2023. On 3 January 2024, the Company announced that following
the execution of the standstill agreement, the Board was pursuing
various avenues to seek to raise additional funding to provide
working capital for the group's operational development and to
settle various balances due to the Company's outstanding creditors
in order to facilitate publication of the 2022 Accounts and Interim
Results on a going concern basis.
The Group commenced commercial
production in January 2022. This was later than previously
anticipated due to permitting issues and then
with the operational setbacks, production has not been delivering
the expected revenues. With the CLN investment in January
2023, this enabled the Company to invest in new plant and equipment
to help improve and increase the production and staking onto the
Heap Leach. Mining and Staking recommenced in June 2023 and the
cashflow projections are based upon increasing the production and
staking, which will improve in 2024, which in turn will improve
revenues. 2023 gold produced and sold amounted to approximately
1,250 ounces of gold bullion.
The financial models and
projections prepared by the Board, in order to monitor cash flow,
demonstrate that the Group, in common with many businesses engaged
in the early stages of development will require additional funds
and/or funding facilities in order to fully develop its business,
which is a follow on from the delays and problems encountered with
production and permitting, and for the exploration to expand the
resource. With continued support from the Group and Companies
shareholders, the directors are confident that the Group and
Company are able to meet their liabilities as they fall
due.
At the date of this report the
Board is, therefore, confident of the ability of the Group and
Company to continue mining and make the on-going operational
improvements, as announced in January 2023. The Board is confident
that with the continued support of the shareholders, the Group and
Company can meet all its contractual obligations as they fall due
for the foreseeable future and therefore, the Board believes it is
appropriate to continue to adopt the going concern
basis.
Although the Board is confident
that it will be able to raise further funding if and when required,
there is always a risk that this may not be possible. In
April 2024, the Company announced a conditional Subscription of
182,000,000 new ordinary shares at the closing offer price of 1
penny per ordinary share. The Subscription Shares shall have one
warrant attached with an exercise price of 2 pence for a period of
24 months from the date of admission. In addition, the Company has
agreed an extension of the Standstill Agreement until 31 December
2025, as announced on 10 April 2024 and for the conversion of the
accrued interest to 31 December 2023 to be converted in addition to
the conditional Subscription.
(c)
functional and
presentational currency
Items included in the financial
statements of each of the Group's subsidiaries are measured using
the currency of the primary economic environment in which the
entity operates (its functional currency). These consolidated
financial statements are presented in United States Dollars, which
is the functional and presentational currency of the
Group.
In preparing the financial
statements of the individual entities, transactions in currencies
other than the entity's functional currency (foreign currencies)
are recorded at the rates of exchange prevailing on the dates of
the transactions. At each balance sheet date, monetary items
denominated in foreign currencies are retranslated at the rates
prevailing at the balance sheet date.
Exchange differences arising on
the settlement of monetary items and on the retranslation of
monetary items are included in the statement of comprehensive
income for the period.
For the purpose of presenting
consolidated financial statements, the assets and liabilities of
the Group's foreign operations are expressed in United States
Dollars using exchange rates prevailing at the balance sheet
date. Income and expense items are translated at the average
exchange rates for the period. Exchange differences arising
if any, are classified as other comprehensive income and are
transferred to the Group's translation reserve.
When the settlement of monetary
items receivable from or payable to a foreign operation is neither
planned nor likely in the foreseeable future, foreign currency
gains and losses arising from such items are considered to form
part of a net investment in foreign operations and are recognised
in other comprehensive income, and presented in the exchange
reserve in equity.
(d)
use of estimates and
judgements
In the application of the Group's
accounting policies, the directors are required to make judgements,
estimates and assumptions about the carrying amount of assets and
liabilities that are not readily apparent from other sources.
The estimates and associated assumptions are based on
historical experience and other factors that are considered to be
relevant. Actual results may differ from these estimates.
The estimates and underlying assumptions are reviewed on an
ongoing basis. Revisions to accounting estimates are
recognised in the period in which the estimates are revised if the
revision affects only that period, or in a period of the revision
and future periods if the revision affects both current and future
periods.
The following are the key
estimates and judgements that have a significant risk of resulting
in a material adjustment within the next year:
(i)
impairment of property, plant and equipment
The assessment of property, plant
and equipment for any internal and external indications of
impairment involves judgement. Each reporting period, the
Group assesses whether there are any indicators of impairment, if
indicated then a formal estimate of the recoverable amount is
performed and an impairment loss recognised to the extent that the
carrying amount exceeds recoverable amount. Recoverable
amount is determined as the value in use. Determining whether
the projects are impaired requires an estimation of the recoverable
value of the individual areas to which value has been
ascribed. The value in use calculation requires the entity to
estimate the future cash flows expected to arise from the projects
in order to calculate present value.
(ii)
production
start date
The Group assesses the stage of
the mine under construction to determine when the mine moves into
production stage. The criteria used to assess the start date
are determined based on the complexities and operational status of
the mine. The Group considers various criteria to assess when
the mine is commercially operational and should be reclassified
from Assets under construction to 'Producing Mines' or 'Property
plant and equipment.' Some of the criteria will include, but not
limited to the following:
·
completion of a reasonable period of testing the
mine plant and equipment;
·
completion of the commissioning
period;
·
ability to produce metal in a saleable
form;
·
ability to sustain ongoing production of metal;
and
·
ability to be able to export product for
commercial sale.
When a mine construction project
moves into the production stage, the capitalisation of certain mine
construction costs cease and costs are either regarded as inventory
or expenses except for costs that qualify for capitalisation
relating to mining assets. This is also the point at which
the depreciation/amortisation recognition criteria commences.
The Group considers that the above criteria was met in the year and
the asset was transferred from Assets under construction to a
Producing Mine.
(iii)
inventory
Net realisable tests are performed
at least annually and represent the future sale price of the
product based on prevailing spot metal prices at the reporting
date, less estimated costs to complete production and bring the
product to sale.
Stockpiles are measure by
estimating the number of tonnes added and removed from the
stockpile, the number of contained gold ounces based on assay data
and estimated recovery percentage based on expected processing
method.
The Company had paused mining in
Q4 2022 as Pit 1 had reached the limit of the accessible free dig
oxide ore. The mine planning of Pit 2 was being undertaken
and consultation with the local communities to ensure smooth
operations for the future, therefore the ore on the rompad had
been depleted at the year end.
(iv) ore
reserves and resources
Ore reserves are estimates of the
amount of ore that can economically and legally be extracted from
the mine. The Group estimates its ore reserves and mineral
resources, based on information compiled by appropriately qualified
person relating to the geological data on the size, depth and share
of the ore body and requires complex geological judgments to
interpret the data. The estimation of recoverable reserves is
based upon factors such as estimates of foreign exchanges rates,
commodity prices, future capital requirements and production costs
along with geological assumptions and judgements made in estimating
the size and grade of the ore body. Changes in the reserve or
resource estimates may impact upon the carrying value of
exploration and evaluation asses, mine properties, property plant
and equipment provision for rehabilitation and
depreciation/amortisation charges.
(v) mine
rehabilitation provision
The Group assesses its mine
rehabilitation provision annually. Significant estimates and
assumptions are made in determining the provision for the mine
rehabilitation as there are numerous factors that will affect the
ultimate liability payable. These factors include estimates
of the extent and cost of rehabilitation activities, technological
changes, regulatory changes, and changes in discount rates.
Those uncertainties may result in future actual expenditure
differing from the amounts currently provided. The provision
at the reporting date represents managements best estimate of the
present value of the rehabilitation
provision.
(vi)
valuation of share warrants
The fair value of share warrants
is calculated using the Black-Scholes model. The model
requires a number of inputs to calculate the fair value of the
warrants. Volatility is based on the Group's trading
performance and the risk-free rate is determined using a 3-year UK
government bond. The directors have reviewed the underlying
inputs and are happy that these appear reasonable.
(vii) gold bullion
loan
A loan repayable in gold bullion
is recorded as a revenue transaction as the extracted gold used in
settlement would otherwise generate income. A currency value is
placed on repayments based on pre agreed US$ value per
ounce.
3. significant
accounting policies
The accounting policies set out
below have been applied consistently to all periods presented in
these consolidated financial statements.
(a) basis of consolidation
The consolidated financial
statements comprise the financial statements of the Group as at 31
December 2022. Control is achieved when the Group is exposed, or
has rights, to variable returns from its involvement with the
investee and has the ability to affect those returns through its
power over the investee. Specifically, the Group controls an
investee if, and only if, the Group has:
·
power over the investee (i.e. existing rights
that give it the current ability to direct the relevant activities
of the investee);
·
exposure, or rights, to variable returns from its
involvement with the investee; and
·
the ability to use its power over the investee to
affect its returns.
(a) basis of consolidation
Generally, there is a presumption
that a majority of voting rights result in control. To support this
presumption and when the Group has less than a majority of the
voting or similar rights of an investee, the Group considers all
relevant facts and circumstances in assessing whether it has power
over an investee, including:
·
the contractual arrangement with the other vote
holders of the investee;
·
rights arising from other contractual
arrangements; and
·
the Group's voting rights and potential voting
rights.
The Group reassesses whether or
not it controls an investee if facts and circumstances indicate
that there are changes to one or more of the three elements of
control. Consolidation of a subsidiary begins when the Group
obtains control over the subsidiary and ceases when the Group loses
control of the subsidiary. Assets, liabilities, income and expenses
of a subsidiary acquired or disposed of during the year are
included in the consolidated financial statements from the date the
Group gains control until the date the Group ceases to control the
subsidiary.
All intra-group transactions,
balances, income and expenses are eliminated on consolidation. When
necessary, adjustments are made to the financial statements of
subsidiaries to bring their accounting policies into line with the
Group's accounting policies.
(b) financial instruments
(i) non-derivative financial
assets
The Group recognises loans and
receivables at fair value on the date that they are originated.
All other financial assets are recognised initially on the
trade date, which is the date that the Group becomes party to the
contractual provisions of the instrument.
The Group derecognises a financial
asset when the contractual rights to the cash flows from the asset
expire, or it transfers the rights to receive the contractual cash
flows in a transaction in which substantially all the risks and
rewards of ownership of the financial asset are transferred.
Any interest in such transferred financial assets that is
created or retained by the Group is recognised as a separate asset
or liability.
Financial assets and liabilities
are offset and the net amount presented in the statement of
financial position when, and only when, the Group has a legal right
to offset the amounts and intends either to settle them on a net
basis or to realise the asset and settle the liability
simultaneously. The Group classifies non-derivative financial
assets into the following categories: loans and receivables and
cash and cash equivalents.
Loans and receivables are
financial assets with fixed or determinable payments that are not
quoted in an active market. Such assets are recognised initially at
fair value plus any directly attributable transaction costs.
Subsequent to initial recognition, loans and receivables are
measured at amortised cost using the effective interest method,
less any impairment losses. Loans and receivables comprise trade
and other receivables.
Cash and cash equivalents comprise
bank balances and cash on hand.
(ii) non-derivative financial
liabilities
The Group recognises financial
liabilities initially on the trade date, which is the date that the
Group becomes a party to the contractual provisions of the
instrument. The Group derecognises a financial liability when
its contractual obligations are discharged, cancelled or
expire.
The Group classifies
non-derivative financial liabilities into trade and other
payables.
(iii) gold loan
The gold loan is initially valued
at cost on day one and then revalued at spot rate at each financial
year end. This gives rise to an embedded swap which is
recorded separately in the financial statements as a financial
derivative but is part of the overall gold loan.
(iv) share capital
Ordinary shares are classified as
equity. Incremental costs directly attributable to the issue of the
ordinary shares are recognised as a deduction from equity, net of
any tax effects.
(v) deferred shares
Deferred shares are classified as
equity and held in the capital contribution reserve.
(c)
share based
payments
The Group has applied the
requirements of IFRS 2 - 'Share based payment.' IFRS 2 has been
applied to all grants of equity instruments. The fair value
of warrants and the employee share option scheme is calculated at
the grant date using the Black-Scholes model. The resulting
cost is charged to the statement of comprehensive income over the
vesting period or in line with the services provided in
consideration for the issue. Fair value at the date of issue
is recognised in the share option reserve and then transferred to
the profit and loss reserve once warrants have been
exercised.
(d)
property, plant and
equipment
Upon completion of mine
construction, the assets initially charged to 'Assets under
construction' are transferred to 'Plant and equipment and motor
vehicles' or 'Producing mines.' Items of 'Plant and equipment
and motor vehicles' and 'Producing Mines' are stated at cost, less
accumulated depreciation and accumulated impairment
losses.
During the construction period
expenditure directly attributable to the construction of each
individual asset is capitalised as 'Assets under construction' up
to the period when the asset is ready to be put into
operation. When an asset is put into operation it is
transferred to 'Plant and equipment and motor vehicles' or
'Producing mines.' Additional capital cost incurred subsequent to
the date of commencement of operation of the asset are charged
directly to 'Plant and equipment motor vehicles' or 'Producing
mines', i.e. where the asset itself was transferred.
The initial cost of an asset
comprises its purchase price or construction cost, any costs
directly attributable to bringing the asset into operation, the
initial estimate of the rehabilitation obligation and, for
qualifying assets, borrowing costs. The purchase price or
construction cost is the aggregate amount paid and the fair value
of any other consideration given to acquire the asset.
When a mine construction project
moves into production stage, the capitalisation of certain mine
construction costs ceases and costs are either regarded as
inventory or expensed, except for costs which qualify for
capitalisation relating to mining asset additions or improvements,
underground mine development or mineable reserve development.
Accumulated mine development costs within producing mines are
depreciated on a units-of-production basis over the economically
viable reserves of the mine.
Property, plant and equipment is
stated at cost less accumulated depreciation and any recognised
impairment loss. Depreciation is charged so as to write off
the cost or valuation of assets over their estimated lives, using
the straight-line method, unless otherwise indicated, on the
following bases:
Gold samples
no depreciation charged
Computer equipment
over three years
Office
equipment
over four years
Field/geological equipment
over four
years
Motor vehicles
over four years
The carrying value of property,
plant and equipment is reviewed for impairment when events or
changes in circumstances indicate that the carrying value may not
be recoverable. The gain or loss arising on the disposal or
retirement of an asset is determined as the difference between the
sale proceeds and the carrying amount of the asset is recognised in
statement of comprehensive income.
(e)
intangible assets - exploration and
evaluation
The costs of exploration
properties and leases, which include the cost of acquiring
prospective properties and exploration rights and costs incurred in
exploration and evaluation activities, are capitalised as
intangible assets as part of exploration and evaluation
assets.
Exploration and evaluation assets
are carried forward during the exploration and evaluation stage and
are assessed for impairment in accordance with indicators of
impairment set out in IFRS 6 - 'Exploration for and Evaluation of
Mineral Resources.'
In circumstances where a property
is abandoned, the cumulative capitalised costs relating to the
property are written off in the period. No amortisation is
charged prior to commencement of production.
Once commercially viable reserves
are established and development is sanctioned, exploration and
evaluation assets are transferred to assets under
construction.
When commercial production
commences, exploration, evaluation and development costs previously
capitalised are transferred to property, plant and equipment and
depreciated.
Exploration and evaluation costs
incurred after commercial production start date in relation to
evaluation of potential mineral reserves and resources that are
expected to result in increase of reserves are capitalised as
evaluation and exploration assets within intangible assets.
Once there is evidence that reserves are increased, such costs are
tested for impairment and transferred to producing
mines.
(f) impairment of financial
assets
A financial asset is impaired if
there is objective evidence of impairment as a result of one or
more events that occurred after the initial recognition of the
asset, and that loss event(s) had an impact on the estimated future
cash flows of that asset that can be estimated reliably.
The Group considers evidence of
impairment for financial assets measured at amortised cost at both
a specific asset and collective level based on useful economic
life.
An impairment loss in respect of a
financial asset measured at amortised cost is calculated as the
difference between its carrying amount and the present value of the
estimated future cash flows discounted at the asset's original
effective interest rate. Losses are recognised in the statement of
comprehensive income.
The carrying amount of the Group's
non-financial assets are reviewed at each reporting date to
determine whether there is any indication of impairment. If any
such indication exists, then the asset's recoverable amount is
estimated. An impairment loss is recognised if the carrying
amount of an asset exceeds its recoverable amount.
For trade receivables and other
receivables due in less than 12 months, the Group applies the
simplified approach in calculating ECL's, as permitted by IFRS
9. Therefore, the Group does not track changes in credit
risk, but instead recognises a loss allowance based on the
financial asset's lifetime ECL at each reporting date.
(g)
provisions
(i)
general
Provisions are recognised when (a)
the Group has a present obligation (legal or constructive) as a
result of a past event and (b) it is probable that an outflow of
resources embodying economic benefits will be required to settle
the obligation and a reliable estimate can be made of the amount of
the obligation. If the effect of the time value of money is
material, provisions are discounted using a risk free rate that
reflects, where appropriate, the risks specific to the
liability. When discounting is used, the increase in the
provision due to the passage of time is recognised as a finance
cost.
(ii)
rehabilitation
provision
The Group records the present
value of estimated costs of legal and constructive obligations
required to restore the operating locations in the period in which
the obligation is incurred. The nature of these restoration
activities include dismantling and removing structures,
rehabilitating mines, dismantling operating facilities, closure of
plant and waste sites and restoration, reclamation and revegetation
of affected areas.
The obligation generally arises
when the asset is installed or environment is disturbed at the
production location. When the liability is initially
recognised, the present value of the estimated cost is capitalised
by increasing the carrying amount of the related mining asset to
the extent that it was incurred prior to the production of related
ore. Over time, the discounted liability is increased for the
change in present value based on the discount rates that reflect
current market assessments and the risks specific to the
liability.
The periodic unwinding of the
discount is recognised in the Group statement of comprehensive
income as a finance cost. Additional disturbances or changes
in rehabilitation costs will be recognised as additions or charges
to the corresponding assets and rehabilitation liability when they
occur. Any reduction in the rehabilitation liability and
therefore any deduction from the rehabilitation asset may not
exceed the carrying amount of that asset. If it does, any
excess over the carrying value is taken immediately to the Group
statement of comprehensive income.
If the change in estimate results
in an increase in the rehabilitation liability and therefore an
addition to the carrying value of the asset, the Group is required
to consider whether this is an indication of impairment of the
asset as whole and test for impairment in accordance with IAS
36.
(h)
related parties
For the purposes of the
consolidated financial statements, the following parties are
considered to be related:
·
Where one party has the ability to control the
other party or exercise significant influence over the other party
in making financial or operational decisions;
·
Entities under common control; and
·
Key management personnel.
In considering each possible
related party relationship, attention is directed to the substance
of the relationship, not merely the legal form.
Related parties may enter into
transactions which unrelated parties might not and transactions
between related parties may not be effected on the same terms,
condition and amounts as transaction between unrelated
parties. It is the nature of transactions with related
parties that they cannot be presumed to be carried out on an arm's
length basis.
(i)
taxation
Current and deferred tax is
charged or credited in the statement of comprehensive income,
except when it relates to items charged or credited directly to
equity, in which case the related tax is also dealt with in equity.
Current tax is calculated on the basis of the tax laws enacted or
substantively enacted at the reporting date in the countries where
the Company and its subsidiaries operate.
Deferred tax liabilities are
generally recognised for all taxable temporary differences and
deferred tax assets are generally recognised for all deductible
temporary differences to the extent that it is probable that
taxable profits will be available against which those deductible
temporary differences can be utilised, except for differences
arising on investments in subsidiaries where the Group is able to
control the timing of the reversal of the difference and it is
probable that the difference will not reverse in the foreseeable
future.
Recognition of the deferred tax
assets is restricted to those instances where it is probable that a
taxable profit will be available against which the difference can
be utilised.
Deferred tax is calculated based
on rates enacted or substantively enacted at the reporting date and
expected to apply when the related deferred tax asset is realised
or liability settled.
(j) inventories
Metal in circuit consists of
in-circuit material at properties with milling or processing
operations and ore awaiting refinement, all valued at the lower of
average cost and net realisable value. In-process inventory
costs consist of direct production costs (including mining,
crushing, and processing and site administration costs) and
allocated indirect costs (including depreciation, depletion and
amortisation of producing mines and mining interests).
Ore stockpiles consist of
stockpiled ore, ore on surface and crushed ore, all valued at the
lower of average cost and net realisable value. Ore stockpile
costs consist of direct production costs (including mining,
crushing and processing and site administration costs) and
allocated indirect costs (including depreciation, depletion and
amortisation of producing mines and mining interests).
Finished goods consist of dore
bars that have been refined and assayed and are in the form that
allows them to be sold. Finished goods valued at the lower of
average cost and net realisable value. Finished goods cost
consist of direct production costs (including mining, crushing and
processing and site administration costs) and allocated indirect
costs (including depreciation, depletion and amortisation of
producing mines and mining interests).
(k) finance cost
Borrowing costs directly relating
to the acquisition, construction or production of a qualifying
capital project under construction are capitalised and added to the
project cost during construction until such time the asset are
considered substantially ready for intended use i.e. commercial
production. When funds are borrowed specifically to finance a
project, the amount capitalised represents the actual borrowing
costs incurred.
Any general borrowing costs are
recognised in the statement of comprehensive income of the period
in which they are incurred.
(l) revenue
The Group is principally engaged
in the business of producing gold and silver bullion
concentrate. Revenue from contracts with customers is
recognised when control of the goods is transferred to the customer
at an amount that reflects the consideration to which the Group
expects to be entitled in exchange for those goods.
4.
adoption of new and revised
standards
(a) new and amended standards
The following standards and
amendments were applicable for annual financial statements
beginning on or after 1 January 2022:
·
Amendments to IAS 37, IFRS 3, IAS 16, IFRS 1,
IFRS 9 and IAS 41.
The above amendments had no impact
on the consolidated financial statements of the Group.
(b) new standards in issue but not yet
effective
The new and amended standards and
interpretations that are issued, but not yet effective up to the
date of issuance of the Group's consolidated financial statements
are disclosed below.
The Group intends to adopt these
new and amended standards and interpretations, if applicable, when
they become effective;
·
IFRS 17: Insurance Contracts;
·
Amendments to IAS 1 : Classification of
Liabilities as Current or Non-Current;
·
Amendments to IAS 8: Definition of accounting
estimates;
·
Amendments to IAS 1 and IFRS Practice Statement
2: Disclosure of Accounting Policies; and
·
Amendments to IAS 12: Deferred Tax related to
assets and liabilities arising from a single
transaction.
Where relevant, the Group
evaluates the effect of new Standards, amendments to published
Standards and Interpretations issued but not effective, on the
presentation of the financial statements. The directors have
assessed there to be no material impact on the financial
statements.
5.
revenue
The Group's revenue consists of
sales of gold and silver bullion to a third party
refiner.
in united states dollars
|
31 December
2022
|
31 December
2021
|
|
|
|
gold bullion concentrate
|
8,894,210
|
-
|
silver bullion
concentrate
|
8,339
|
-
|
Total
|
8,902,549
|
-
|
Sales of gold and silver bullion
were made to one main customer, Metalor Technologies SA, the
Group's gold and silver refiners, who are based in Switzerland. The
gold bullion concentrate figure includes US$1,191,427 used to repay
the Gold Loan Facility, set out in the Consolidated Statement of
Cash Flows and in note 19.
6.
operating segments
The Group has two reportable
segments, exploration and corporate, which are the Group's
strategic divisions. For each of the strategic divisions, the
Group's CEO, deemed to be the Chief Operating Decision Maker
("CODM"), reviews internal management reports on at least a monthly
basis. The results are then subsequently shared with the
Board. The Group's reportable segments are:
Exploration, Evaluation and
production: the exploration operating segment is presented as an
aggregation of the Homase and Akrokeri licences (Ghana).
Expenditure on exploration activities for each licence is
used to measure agreed upon expenditure targets for each licence to
ensure the licence clauses are met.
Corporate: the corporate segment
includes the holding company costs in respect of managing the
Group. There are varying levels of integration between the
corporate segment and the combined exploration activities, which
include resources spent and accounted for as corporate expenses
that relate to furthering the exploration activities of individual
licences.
information about reportable segments for the year ended 31
December 2022
in united states dollars
|
exploration
|
corporate
|
total per consolidated statement of comprehensive
income/statement of financial position
|
reportable segment revenue
|
8,902,549
|
-
|
8,902,549
|
|
|
|
|
reportable segment cost of sales
|
(5,746,204)
|
-
|
(5,746,204)
|
|
|
|
|
reportable segment expenditure
|
(2,169,216)
|
(1,661,542)
|
(3,830,758)
|
|
|
|
|
reportable segment profit/(loss)
|
987,129
|
(1,661,542)
|
(674,413)
|
|
|
|
|
reportable segment non- current assets
|
19,967,587
|
-
|
19,967,587
|
|
|
|
|
reportable segment current assets
|
1,080,570
|
17,586
|
1,098,156
|
|
|
|
|
reportable segment liabilities
|
(4,196,956)
|
(4,084,045)
|
(8,281,001)
|
information about reportable segments for the year ended 31
December 2021
in united states dollars
|
exploration
|
corporate
|
total per consolidated statement of comprehensive
income/statement of financial position
|
reportable segment expenditure
|
(1,236,963)
|
(286,132)
|
(1,523,095)
|
|
|
|
|
reportable segment (loss)
|
(1,236,963)
|
(286,132)
|
(1,523,095)
|
|
|
|
|
reportable segment non- current assets
|
21,280,257
|
-
|
21,280,257
|
|
|
|
|
reportable segment current assets
|
2,277,860
|
274,760
|
2,552,620
|
|
|
|
|
reportable segment liabilities
|
(2,066,460)
|
(5,770,902)
|
(7,837,362)
|
7.
expenses by nature
in united states dollars
|
31 December
2022
|
31 December
2021
|
cost of sales
|
|
|
community, environmental and
H&S costs
|
239,291
|
-
|
engineering and
maintenance
|
457,183
|
-
|
mining costs
|
2,314,661
|
-
|
processing costs
|
2,442,833
|
-
|
human resource costs
|
292,236
|
-
|
Total
|
5,746,204
|
-
|
in united states dollars
|
31 December
2022
|
31 December
2021
|
administrative expenses
|
|
|
finance and administration
costs
|
3,319,225
|
794,208
|
Total
|
3,319,225
|
794,208
|
The operating loss is stated after
charging:
in united states dollars
|
|
|
year ended
31 December
2022
|
|
year ended
31 December
2021
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
auditor's remuneration in respect
of audit of the
financial statements
|
|
|
|
|
|
- group auditor
- subsidiary auditor
|
|
|
50,645
9,450
|
|
30,000
2,900
|
depreciation
|
|
|
272,404
|
|
71,300
|
foreign exchange
difference
|
|
|
812,410
|
|
164,170
|
8.
finance costs
in united states dollars
|
|
|
year ended
31 December
2022
|
|
year ended
31 December
2021
|
loan derivative and
interest
|
|
|
511,533
|
|
728,887
|
Total
|
|
|
511,533
|
|
728,887
|
9.
property, plant and
equipment
31 December
2022
|
in united states dollars
|
cost
|
accumulated
depreciation
|
accumulated exchange
movement
|
carrying
value
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
producing mine*
|
21,680,553
|
(142,600)
|
(2,510,256)
|
19,027,697
|
|
gold samples
|
4,570
|
-
|
-
|
4,570
|
|
computer equipment
|
96,904
|
(75,169)
|
-
|
21,735
|
|
office equipment
|
119,759
|
(112,343)
|
-
|
7,416
|
|
field/geological
equipment
|
1,236,388
|
(234,051)
|
(123,797)
|
878,540
|
|
motor vehicles
|
84,184
|
(56,555)
|
-
|
27,629
|
|
Total
|
23,222,358
|
(620,718)
|
(2,634,053)
|
19,967,587
|
|
|
|
31 December
2021
|
in united states dollars
|
|
|
cost
|
accumulated
depreciation
|
carrying
value
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
assets under
construction*
|
|
|
20,408,816
|
|
20,408,816
|
gold samples
|
|
|
4,570
|
-
|
4,570
|
computer equipment
|
|
|
74,468
|
(68,263)
|
6,205
|
office equipment
|
|
|
117,182
|
(110,115)
|
7,067
|
field/geological
equipment
|
|
|
953,231
|
(125,529)
|
827,702
|
motor vehicles
|
|
|
70,304
|
(44,407)
|
25,897
|
Total
|
|
|
21,628,571
|
(348,314)
|
21,280,257
|
reconciliation of property, plant and equipment - 31 December
2022
in united states dollars
|
carrying
value
opening
balance
|
additions
|
depreciation
|
exchange movement
|
transfer
|
carrying value ending
balance
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
assets under
construction*
|
20,408,816
|
-
|
-
|
|
(20,408,816)
|
-
|
|
producing mine*
|
-
|
1,271,737
|
(142,600)
|
(2,510,256)
|
20,408,816
|
19,027,697
|
|
gold samples
|
4,570
|
-
|
-
|
|
-
|
4,570
|
|
computer equipment
|
6,205
|
22,436
|
(6,906)
|
-
|
-
|
21,735
|
|
office equipment
|
7,067
|
2,577
|
(2,228)
|
|
-
|
7,416
|
|
field/geological
equipment
|
827,702
|
283,157
|
(108,522)
|
(123,797)
|
-
|
878,540
|
|
motor vehicles
|
25,897
|
13,880
|
(12,148)
|
-
|
-
|
27,629
|
|
Total
|
21,280,257
|
1,593,787
|
(272,404)
|
(2,634,053)
|
-
|
19,967,587
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
reconciliation of property, plant and equipment -31 December
2021
in united states dollars
|
carrying value opening
balance
|
additions
|
depreciation
|
transfer
|
carrying value ending
balance
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
assets under
construction*
|
-
|
5,322,404
|
-
|
15,086,412
|
20,408,816
|
gold samples
|
4,570
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
4,570
|
computer equipment
|
6,065
|
1,100
|
(960)
|
-
|
6,205
|
office equipment
|
3,105
|
5,510
|
(1,548)
|
-
|
7,067
|
field/geological
equipment
|
38,215
|
444,923
|
(12,558)
|
357,122
|
827,702
|
motor vehicles
|
439,253
|
-
|
(56,234)
|
(357,122)
|
25,897
|
total
|
491,208
|
5,773,937
|
(71,300)
|
15,086,412
|
21,280,257
|
* Includes a provision for
rehabilitation costs of $821,622 (2021: $901,284).
Exchange losses on opening assets
of $2,634,053 were recognised in the financial
statements.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
10.
intangible assets - exploration and
evaluation
The Group's intangible assets
comprise wholly of exploration and evaluation assets in respect of
AKHM in Ghana.
in united states dollars
|
31
December
|
|
|
balance as at 31 December 2020
|
14,339,772
|
additions
transfer to assets under
construction (see note 9)
|
746,640
(15,086,412)
|
balance as at 31 December 2021 and 2022
|
-
|
Once commercially viable reserves
are established and development is sanctioned, exploration and
evaluation assets are transferred to assets under
construction. This took place in 31 December 2021 see Note 9
for further details.
11.
taxation
current and deferred
tax
The Company is subject to Jersey
income tax at the rate of 0%. The subsidiary is registered for
income tax purposes with the Ghana Revenue Service. Due to
the loss-making position of the Group in all jurisdictions there is
no tax charge and no deferred tax asset has been recognised in the
current or prior periods due to the uncertainty and timing of
future profits. As a result, no reconciliation has been
prepared. The Company should be registered
for UK Corporation Tax and management are currently in the process
of registering it for such.
12. trade
and other receivables
in united states dollars
|
31 December
2022
|
31 December
2021
|
|
|
|
trade receivables
|
405,414
|
-
|
other receivables
|
465,054
|
257,013
|
Total
|
870,468
|
257,013
|
Other receivables include US$ nil
(2021: US$27,955) in respect of the fair value of share warrants
issued in the relevant period.
13.
inventory
in united states dollars
|
31 December
2022
|
31 December
2021
|
|
|
|
gold in circuit
|
-
|
602,097
|
gold on hand
|
-
|
1,142,276
|
ore stockpile
|
85,098
|
214,710
|
consumables
|
29,278
|
-
|
Total
|
114,376
|
1,959,083
|
At the Homase Mine Heap Leach
Operation, from the process recovery sheet, it has been calculated
that there is 66.3 kilos of gold, 2,134 ounces, that is still
within the heap leach process circuit, this is classed as "Gold in
Process" ("GIP"). This GIP is currently locked within the heap
leach circuit. This is due to previous operational issues,
including inefficient screening, agglomeration and stacking
methods, as such, there will be limited recovery from this GIP gold
until a new process method is introduced. The current JORC
Resource, at 602,000 ounces is between measured, indicated and
inferred. The Resource which was calculated in 2012, and
requires infill drilling, to reduce the wide spacing within the
Resource, to bring the JORC Resource to modern
parameters.
In order to incorporate the GIP, a
Revised Resource was calculated for the Statement 31 December 2022.
It was noted that in 2022, 5,155 ounces of gold were sold to
Metalor Technologies SA. The GIP is 66.3 kilos of gold, 2,134
ounces, that is locked within the heap leach process circuit,
requires a new process method to liberate it, it was agreed to
classify this GIP as an inferred resource. Therefore, the Revised
Resource Statement 31 December 2022, calculated to 2012 Standards,
stands as:
|
Tonnage
Tonnes
(million)
|
Grade
(Au g/t)
|
Contained
Gold
Ounces
|
Inferred JORC Resource
|
10.6
|
1.64
|
602,000
|
2022 Ounces Deducted
|
0.2
|
1.53
|
5,155
|
Sub-Total Inferred
|
10.4
|
1.64
|
596,845
|
GIP
|
0.21
|
1.34
|
2,134
|
2022 Inferred Resource
|
6.23
|
1.77
|
598,979
|
14.
cash and cash
equivalents
The cash and cash equivalents
balance at the year-end consists of balances in the following
currencies:
in united states dollars
|
31 December
2022
|
31 December
2021
|
|
|
|
sterling
|
5,557
|
78,372
|
US dollars
|
55,170
|
218,818
|
ghana cedis
|
52,585
|
39,334
|
Total
|
113,312
|
336,524
|
15.
provision for
rehabilitation
in united states dollars
|
31 December
2022
|
31 December
2021
|
|
|
|
1 January
|
901,284
|
-
|
additions
|
-
|
901,284
|
movement in discount
rate
|
(79,622)
|
-
|
Total
|
821,622
|
901,284
|
The Group has a liability for
restoration, rehabilitation and environmental costs arising from
its mining operations. Estimates of the cost of this work including
reclamation costs, close down and pollution control are made on an
ongoing basis, based on the estimated life of the mine. The
provision represents the net present value of the best estimate of
the expenditure required to settle the obligation to rehabilitate
any environmental disturbances caused by mining
operations.
16.
capital and
reserves
(a) share capital
|
|
|
31 December
2022
|
31 December
2021
|
|
|
|
|
|
ordinary shares
|
|
|
|
|
called up, allotted and fully paid
|
|
|
|
|
496,190,047 ordinary shares of 1
penny each
(31 December 2021:
459,033,996)
|
|
|
£4,961,901
|
£4,590,340
|
converted to united states dollars
at date of issue
|
|
|
$6,836,778
|
$6,383,213
|
|
|
|
|
|
deferred shares
|
|
|
|
|
called up, allotted and fully paid
|
|
|
|
|
in issue at 1 January
|
|
|
£3,730,772
|
£3,730,772
|
|
|
|
|
|
In issue at 31 December - fully
paid 414,530,304 (31 December 2021: 414,530,304) deferred 0.9 pence
shares
|
|
|
£3,730,772
|
£3,730,772
|
converted to united states dollars
at date of issue
|
|
|
$6,077,013
|
$6,077,013
|
Authorised
|
|
|
|
|
1,000,000,000 (31 December 2021:
1,000,000,000) authorised ordinary 1 penny shares
|
|
|
£10,000,000
|
£10,000,000
|
During the year the Company issued
the following 1 penny fully paid shares:
|
|
Number of
Shares
|
Nominal
Value
|
Share
premium
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
January 2022
|
Opening balance
|
459,033,996
|
$6,383,213
|
$33,535,384
|
|
|
|
|
|
28 June 2022
|
Shares at 3p share
|
14,000,000
|
£140,000
|
£280,000
|
|
Converted to United States Dollars
at date of issue
|
-
|
$180,653
|
$355,410
|
13 July 2022
|
Shares at 3p share
|
6,000,000
|
£60,000
|
£120,000
|
|
Converted to United States Dollars
at date of issue
|
-
|
$71,233
|
$142,465
|
|
Shares at 7p share
|
3,600,000
|
£36,000
|
£216,000
|
|
Converted to United States Dollars
at date of issue *
|
-
|
$42,740
|
$256,437
|
19 July 2022
|
Shares at 6.55p share
|
9,802,821
|
£98,028
|
£544,057
|
|
Converted to United States Dollars
at date of issue **
|
-
|
$117,026
|
$649,495
|
18 October 2022
|
Shares at 5.9p share
|
3,753,230
|
£37,532
|
£183,908
|
|
Converted to United States Dollars
at date of issue
|
-
|
$41,913
|
$203,926
|
31
December 2022
|
Closing balance
|
496,190,047
|
$6,836,778
|
$35,143,117
|
*During the year, six bond notes
held by Nguvu Holdings Limited were redeemed in shares (note
19).
** The
outstanding balance on the Paracale loan of US$766,521 was
converted into 9,802,821 new Ordinary Shares (the
''Conversion
Shares'') at a price of 6.55p per
Ordinary Share. Following the Loan Conversion, there are no
outstanding loans or warrants held by Paracale (note
19).
(b)
ordinary shares
Each holder of ordinary shares is
entitled to receive dividends as declared from time to time and is
entitled to one vote per share at meetings of the
Company.
(c) deferred shares
Each holder of deferred shares
shall not be entitled to receive notice of, attend or vote at any
meeting of the Company (other than a meeting of the holder of the
deferred shares), shall not be entitled to any dividends or other
distributions (whether on a winding up of the Company or
otherwise). On a winding up of the Company, each deferred
share shall confer upon its holder the right to receive an amount
equal to the nominal amount paid up on such deferred share.
The Company has not concluded any
share repurchases since its incorporation.
(d) dividends
No dividends were proposed or
declared during the period under review (2021: Nil).
(e) description and purpose of
reserves
(i) share capital
Share capital consists of amounts
subscribed for share capital at nominal value.
(ii) share premium
Share premium consists of amounts
subscribed for share capital in excess of nominal value.
(iii) foreign exchange
reserve
Cumulative gains and losses on
translating the net assets of overseas operations to the
presentation currency.
(iv) capital contribution
reserve
Capital contribution reserve
consists of deferred shares classified as equity.
(v) share options
reserve
Share options and warrants reserve
consists of the fair value of options and warrants outstanding at
the year end. As there are no share options and warrants
outstanding as at year end, the whole balance has been transferred
to accumulated deficit.
(vi) accumulated
deficit
Accumulated deficit reserve
represents the cumulative net gains and losses recognised in the
consolidated statement of comprehensive income.
17.
earnings per share
The calculation of basic and
diluted earnings per share at 31 December 2022 was based on the
losses attributable to ordinary shareholders of US$674,413 (2021:
US$1,523,095), and an average number of ordinary shares in issue of
474,744,043 (2021: 353,369,120).
|
|
31 December
2022
|
|
31 December
2021
|
|
|
|
|
|
loss attributable to shareholders
(in US$)
|
|
(674,413)
|
|
(1,523,095)
|
weighted average number of ordinary
shares
|
|
474,744,043
|
|
353,369,120
|
basic and diluted earnings per share (in
US$)
|
|
(0.001)
|
|
(0.004)
|
The Group has the following
instruments which could potentially dilute basic earnings per share
in the future:
in number of shares
|
|
31 December
2022
|
|
31 December
2021
|
|
|
|
|
|
Warrants
|
|
-
|
|
26,000,000
|
Please refer to note 25 as a
potentially diluting instrument has been issued post year
end.
18.
share based payment
arrangements
At 31 December 2022, the Group has
the following share-based payment arrangements:
(a) share option programmes
(equity-settled)
The Group has adopted an Option
Scheme in order to incentivise key management and staff. Pursuant
to the option scheme, a duly authorised committee of the Board of
the Company may, at its discretion, grant options to eligible
employees, including directors, of the Company or any of its
subsidiaries, to subscribe for shares in the Company at a price not
less than the higher of (i) the closing price of the shares of the
Company on the Stock Exchange on the date of grant of the
particular option or (ii) the nominal value of the
shares.
There were no market conditions
within the terms of the grant of the options therefore the main
vesting condition for all the options awarded was that the director
or employee remained contracted to the Group at the date of
exercise.
The conditions relating to the
grants of the share option programmes are as follows:
The terms relating to the grants
of the share option programmes are that on exercise date, the
receiver of the options must still be employed by the Company, or
in the case of the receiver being retrenched or retired, before
three months thereafter, or in the case of the death of the
receiver, before six months thereafter.
There were no such options granted
during the years ended 31 December 2022 or 31 December
2021.
(b) reconciliation of outstanding share
options
There are no options outstanding at
31 December 2022 or 31 December 2021.
(c)
warrants
All Ordinary Shares issued
(excluding deferred shares) pursuant to the exercise of warrants
rank pari passu in all
respects with the ordinary shares.
The fair value of the warrants
issued was measured using the Black-Scholes model. Expected
volatility was estimated by considering historical volatility of
the Company's share price over the period commensurate with the
expected return.
reconciliation of outstanding
warrants
the number and weighted average exercise
prices
|
number of
warrants
31 December
2022
|
weighted average exercise
price
31 December
2022
|
number of
warrants
31 December
2021
|
weighted average exercise
price
31 December
2021
|
|
|
|
|
|
outstanding as at 1
January
|
26,000,000
|
3.0p
|
182,352,377
|
2.6p
|
granted during the year
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
lapsed during the year
|
(6,000,000)
|
-
|
|
|
exercised during the
year
|
(20,000,000)
|
3.0p
|
(156,352,377)
|
2.5p
|
outstanding at 31 December
|
-
|
-
|
26,000,000
|
3.0p
|
exercisable at 31 December
|
-
|
-
|
26,000,000
|
3.0p
|
There are no warrants outstanding
as at 31 December 2022. In the prior year the weighted
exercise price was 3.0p and weighted average life was 0.5
years.
(d)
measurement of fair
value
The inputs used in measuring the
fair values of the warrants at grant date were as
follows:
|
warrants
|
warrants
|
warrants
|
|
19 March
2020
|
22 June
2020
|
27 December
2018
|
|
|
|
|
share price at grant
|
2.10p
|
4.20p
|
1.20p
|
warrant exercise price
|
3.00p
|
3.00p
|
1.20p
|
expected life of warrants from
exercise date
|
2.3
years
|
2.0
years
|
3.4
years
|
expected volatility
|
63.74%
|
65.71%
|
51.6%
|
expected dividend yield
|
0.00%
|
0.00%
|
0.00%
|
risk free rate
|
0.27%
|
(0.05)%
|
0.74%
|
fair value per warrant
|
0.56p
|
1.96p
|
0.67p
|
US$:GBP exchange rate
used
|
1.27258
|
1.24785
|
1.2469
|
The risk free rate has been
determined based on 3 year UK government bonds.
Total fair value recognised in the
share options and warrants reserve in respect of warrants issued in
the year was US$ nil (2021: US$ nil).
(e) expense recognised in statement of
comprehensive income
The fair value of the warrants
issued on 27 December 2018 has been reflected within trade and
other receivables and is being released and initially capitalised
as part of the exploration asset, over the period of the loan
facility; see note 19 for further details. The amount
capitalised during the year was US$nil (2021:
US$67,100).
The fair value of the warrants
issued on 19 March 2020 has been reflected within trade and other
receivables and is being released and initially capitalised as part
of the exploration asset over the period of the bond facility, see
note 19 for further details. The amount capitalised during
the year was US$nil (2021: US$75,130).
The fair value of the warrants
issued on 22 June 2020 has been reflected within trade and other
receivables and is being released and initially capitalised as part
of the exploration asset over the period of the gold loan facility,
see note 19 for further details. The amount capitalised
during the year was US$nil (2021: US$1,682,615).
19.
borrowings
in united states dollars
|
31 December
2022
|
31 December
2021
|
shareholder loan
|
-
|
742,587
|
gold loan
loan derivative
bonds
|
2,906,262
905,765
-
|
3,769,500
728,770
300,000
|
current borrowing
|
3,812,027
|
5,540,857
|
|
|
|
Shareholder loan
The Company entered into a loan
agreement with Paracale Gold Limited (''Paracale''), the Company's
major shareholder, in December 2018, for a loan of up to US$1.2
million.
In consideration of entering into
the loan agreement, Paracale, were issued with 40,352,377 warrants
to subscribe for such number of 1p ordinary shares at an exercise
price of 1.2p per share, at any time during the period through to 2
June 2022. At 31 December 2022, Paracale had exercised all
its warrants.
During the year the outstanding
balance on the Paracale loan of $766,521 was converted into
9,802,821 new Ordinary Shares (the ''Conversion
Shares'') at a price of 6.55p per
Ordinary Share. Following the Loan Conversion, there are no
outstanding loans or warrants held by Paracale.
Gold Loan
The Company entered into a loan
agreement with AIMSL in June 2020, for a gold loan of up to 2,000
troy ounces of gold at a price of US$1,500 per troy ounce, equating
to a value of US$3.0 million before expenses. AIMSL and the
Company agreed during 2021 to a further extension to the timing of
payment of the principal and interest on the Gold Loan, to 19
September 2021 (being the maturity date of the Gold Loan) (the
''Extension''), although at the default interest rate of 17%.
Interest therefore accrued at the default rate of 17%.
In January 2022, a payment of 19kg
of gold was made in order to repay the interest due for October,
November, and December 2021. The payment was against the
principal and accrued interest, with the interest paid in full and
reducing the principal from 2,000 oz to 1,924.61 oz.
It was further agreed with AIMSL
that in order to enable the Company to efficiently manage
shipments, it would not be deemed an event of default if the
monthly payments set out in the Company's announcement on 20
September 2021 were not made at the end of each month.
On 29 September 2022, it was
agreed with AIMSL to vary the terms of the Agreement as
follows:
·
the date for repayment of the Gold Loan shall be
extended to 30 September 2023 (the ''Revised Term'') and the
Maturity Date stated in Schedule 1 of the Agreement shall be
amended accordingly; and
·
interest shall continue to accrue on the Gold
Loan at the non-default rate of 14% per annum until the date of
repayment.
On 3 January 2024, the Company
announced a Standstill Agreement with AIMSL which provided the
Company with the potential to defer repayment of the gold loan
until 29 June 2024, this has subsequently been extended to 31
December 2025.
The outstanding principal of the
Gold Loan stands at 1,871.31oz, with accrued interest to date of
578.43oz, as at 30 December 2023. A total of 675 oz (21
kilos) of gold has been paid to AIMSL in respect of the Gold Loan,
to the date of signing this report.
Bonds
In March 2020 the Company issued
twenty-six unsecured bond notes of US$50,000 each to certain
existing and new investors, raising, in aggregate, US$1.3 million
before expenses. Paracale Gold and Nguvu Holdings Limited
(formerly BCM Investments Limited) the Company's major
shareholders, each subscribed for six bonds with a value of, in
aggregate, US$0.3 million respectively. During the year, the
remaining six bond notes held by Nguvu Holdings Limited were
redeemed in shares. When entering into the Bonds, a total of
52,000,000 warrants were issued to subscribe for such number of
Ordinary Shares at the Exercise Price, at any time during the
period through to 22 June 2022. During the year 20,000,000
warrants were redeemed and 6,000,000 expired.
20. trade
and other payables
in united states dollars
|
31 December
2022
|
31 December
2021
|
trade payables
other payables
accruals
|
1,513,058
971,948
1,162,346
|
882,045
302,738
210,438
|
Total
|
3,647,352
|
1,395,221
|
21. financial
instruments
(a) financial risk management
The Group's principal financial
instruments comprise of cash, receivables and payables including
the various loans and bonds. Financial risk management of the
Group is governed by policies and guidelines described in the
Group's Financial Reporting Memorandum approved by the Board.
Group policies and guidelines cover interest rate risk, foreign
currency risk, credit risk and liquidity risk. The objective
of financial risk management is to contain, where appropriate,
exposures in these financial risks to limit any negative impact on
the Group's financial performance and financial
position.
(b) credit risk
Credit risk is the risk of
financial loss to the Group if its main customer fails to meet its
contractual obligations. The maximum credit risk exposure
relating to financial assets is represented by their carrying value
as at the consolidated statement of financial position date. The
Group's exposure to significant concentration on credit risk on
trade and other receivables is considered low as the main customer
is reputable and the company has a strong relationship in
place.
(c) liquidity risk
Liquidity risk is the risk that
the Group will encounter difficulty in meeting the obligations
associated with its financial liabilities that are settled by
delivering cash or another financial asset when they fall due.
Ultimate responsibility for liquidity risk management rests
with the Board, which has established an appropriate liquidity risk
management framework for the management of the Group's liquidity
management requirements. The Group manages liquidity risk by
continuously monitoring forecast and actual cash flows, and by
preserving cash resources through minimising the cash burn out rate
achieved through cost reduction. The financial liabilities of
the Group are mainly creditors which are payable on demand, hence
it is the opinion of the Board that an analysis of liabilities by
maturity dates is not appropriate.
(d)
market risk
Market risk is the risk that
changes in market prices, such as foreign exchange rates and
interest rates will affect the Group's income or the value of its
holding in financial instruments. The objective of market
risk management is to manage and control market risk exposures
within acceptable parameters, while optimising the
return.
(i) foreign currency
risk
Currency risk is the risk that the
fair value or future cash flows of a financial instrument will
fluctuate because of changes in foreign exchange rates. The
Group has cash assets denominated in Sterling, United States
Dollars and Ghanaian Cedis and incurs liabilities for its working
capital expenditure in one of these denominations. Payments
are made in Sterling (GBP), United States Dollars (US$) and
Ghanaian Cedis (GHS), or Euro at the pre-agreed price and converted
(if necessary) as soon as payment needs to occur. Currency
conversions and provisions for expenditure are only made as soon as
debts are due and payable. The Group is therefore exposed to
currency risk in so far as its liabilities are incurred in South
African Rand and Ghanaian Cedi and fluctuations occur due to
changes in the GHS/US$ exchange rates. The Group's policy is not to
enter into any currency hedging transactions.
The directors consider currency
risk to be manifested in the expenditure made on a day to day basis
in Sterling, Ghanaian Cedi and US Dollars. The directors have
undertaken a policy of holding cash raised in Sterling and US
Dollars and to convert funds to Ghanaian Cedi as and when
required.
The exchange rates converted to
United States Dollars affecting the Group were as
follows:
|
average rate
2022
|
reporting date spot rate
2022
|
average rate
2021
|
reporting date spot rate
2021
|
|
|
|
|
|
Sterling to US dollars
|
1.229
|
1.210
|
1.376
|
1.353
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ghanaian Cedis to US
dollars
|
0.110
|
0.101
|
0.157
|
0.162
|
A strengthening (weakening) of GBP
or GHS against all other currencies at 31 December 2022 would have
affected the measurement of financial instruments denominated in a
foreign currency and increased (decreased) equity and profit or
loss by the amounts shown below. This analysis is based on
foreign currency exchange rate variances that the Group considered
to be reasonably possible at the end of the reporting period. The
analysis assumes that all other variables, in particular interest
rates, remain constant. The sensitivity analysis includes
only outstanding foreign currency denominated financial assets and
liabilities and adjusts this translation at year end for a
percentage change in foreign currency rate thus indicating the
potential movement in equity.
in united states dollars
|
equity
strengthening
2022
|
equity
weakening
2022
|
equity
strengthening
2021
|
equity
weakening
2021
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
ghanaian cedis 10% (2021:
10%)
|
1,569,844
|
(1,569,844)
|
2,298,000
|
(2,298,000)
|
|
Total
|
1,569,844
|
(1,569,844)
|
2,298,000
|
(2,298,000)
|
|
The percentage change in foreign
currency rate used to adjust the translation of outstanding foreign
currency denominated financial assets and liabilities is in the
opinion of the directors appropriate.
(ii) interest rate risk
The risks caused by changes in
interest rates are minimal since the Group's only interest bearing
financial asset pertains to cash. The Group had a loan arrangement
with Paracale as detailed in note 19. The interest rate was
fixed at 6% for the duration of the term of the loan; this balance
has been settled in full in the year. The Group also has a
loan agreement with AIMSL. The interest rate is fixed at 14%
or 17%. The Group is therefore not subject to a significant
amount of risk due to fluctuations in the prevailing levels of
market interest rates and as such has not prepared a sensitivity
analysis.
22.
related parties
The key management personnel is
considered to be only the directors. Details of their
remuneration are disclosed below.
salaries and other short-term
benefits - detail:
in united states dollars
|
31 December
2022
|
|
31 December
2021
|
|
|
|
|
Director's remuneration: executive
- E Priestley - cash
|
77,500
|
|
65,500
|
Director's remuneration: executive
- E Priestley - shares
|
24,500
|
|
-
|
Director's remuneration (accrued
fee): executive - E Priestley
|
25,500
|
|
54,500
|
Director's remuneration (accrued
BIK): executive - E Priestley
|
28,125
|
|
-
|
Director's remuneration:
non-executive - R Wilkins - cash
|
-
|
|
-
|
Director's remuneration:
non-executive - R Wilkins - shares
|
6,000
|
|
-
|
Director's remuneration (accrued
fee): non-executive - R Wilkins
|
9,000
|
|
12,000
|
Director's remuneration (accrued
BIK): non-executive - R Wilkins
|
3,750
|
|
|
Director's remuneration:
non-executive - W Trew - cash
|
-
|
|
-
|
Director's remuneration: (accrued
fee): non-executive - W Trew
|
27,000
|
|
24,000
|
Director's remuneration: (accrued
BIK): non-executive - W Trew
|
6,750
|
|
|
Director's remuneration:
non-executive - A List - cash
|
-
|
|
-
|
Director's remuneration:
non-executive - A List - shares
|
6,000
|
|
-
|
Director's remuneration (accrued
fee): non-executive - A List
|
9,000
|
|
12,000
|
Director's remuneration (accrued
BIK): non-executive - A List
|
3,750
|
|
|
Director's remuneration:
non-executive - O Fenn - cash
|
-
|
|
-
|
Director's remuneration:
non-executive - O Fenn - shares
|
12,000
|
|
-
|
Director's remuneration (accrued
fee): non-executive - O Fenn
|
9,000
|
|
12,000
|
Director's remuneration (accrued
BIK): non-executive - O Fenn
|
3,750
|
|
|
total
|
251,625
|
|
180,000
|
The total amount payable to the
highest paid director in respect of emoluments was US$127,500
(2021: US$120,000). No directors exercised any share options
during the year (2021: nil).
Bill Trew's remuneration is paid
to Oxus Mining Limited, a company in which he is a director and
sole shareholder. Nothing was paid in the year and has all been
accrued.
E Priestley's remuneration was
paid to Santon Consultancy Services Limited, a company in which she
is a director and sole shareholder.
R Wilkins's remuneration was paid
to KSJ Investments Limited, a company in which he is a
director. R Wilkins owns 90% of the parent company that in
turn owns 100% of KSJ Investments Limited.
During the year, certain of the
Company Directors agreed to convert, in aggregate US$239,250 of
outstanding fees accrued and unpaid to 30 June 2022 into 3,653,230
new Ordinary Shares at a conversion price of 5.9p, being the
mid-market closing price of the Company's Ordinary Shares on 11
October 2022.
Name
|
Number
of Ordinary Shares Currently Owned
|
Number
of Fee Conversion Shares
|
Resultant Shareholding in the Company
|
Percentage of the issued Share Capital of the
Company
|
Angela List
|
59,600,000*
|
320,660
|
59,920,660
|
12.08%
|
Emma Priestley
|
2,711,546
|
2,485,112
|
5,196,658
|
1.05%
|
Richard Wilkins
|
-
|
320,660
|
320,660
|
0.06%
|
Orrie Fenn
|
-
|
526,798
|
526,798
|
0.11%
|
* Held by Nguvu Holdings Limited, a company of
which Angela List is a director and shareholder.
During 2018, the Company entered
into a loan agreement for an amount up to US$1,224k with Paracale,
the Company's major shareholder and a company in which Bill Trew, a
non-executive director (resigned 2 April 2024), holds an interest
in. At 31 December 2022 the balance was US$ nil (2021:
US$743k), which includes interest accrued to date of US$ nil (2021:
US$19k)- see note 19 for further details.
On 16 March 2020 the Company
entered into a bond agreement with Paracale and Nguvu Holdings
Limited (formerly BCM Investments Limited), for 6, 14% bonds of
US$50K each. In addition, 12,000,000 warrants over 1.0p
Ordinary Shares of the Company were awarded to both parties at 3.0p
each. Bill Trew is a director and shareholder of Paracale and
A List is a director of Nguvu Holdings Limited (formerly BCM
Investments Limited) see note 19 for further details.
MAED (UK) Limited (''MAED'') is a
related party, as it is wholly owned by Bill Trew. At the
year-end there is an amount owing to MAED of US$329,288 (2021:
US$266,109), for services provided during the financial
year.
23.
group entities
Details of the Group's
subsidiaries at the end of the reporting period are as
follows:
|
country of incorporation and
operation
|
principal
activity
|
ownership
interest
2022
|
ownership
interest
2021
|
|
|
|
|
|
GoldStone Akrokeri
Limited
|
Ghana
|
Development and exploration of gold and associated
elements
|
100%
|
100%
|
GoldStone Homase Limited
|
Ghana
|
Dormant
|
100%(*)
|
100%(*)
|
(*) Held indirectly via GoldStone Akrokeri
Limited
Under Article 105(11) of the
Companies (Jersey) Law 1991, the directors of the holding company
need not prepare separate accounts (i.e. company only accounts) if
consolidated accounts for the Company are prepared, unless required
to do so by the members of the Company by ordinary resolution. The
members of the Company have not passed a resolution requiring
separate accounts and, in the directors' opinion, the Company meets
the definition of a holding company. As permitted by the law, the
directors have elected not to prepare separate accounts.
24.
ultimate controlling
party
The directors consider that there
is no ultimate controlling party of the Group.
25.
subsequent events
Since the period end, on 27
January 2023, the parent Company, GRL, issued convertible loan
notes to Blue Gold International Limited, ("BGL") in the nominal
amount of £2,400,000 (the "Loan Notes") which are due for redemption on 30
November 2024.
As with all equity and debt raised
by GRL, all monies are intended for GAL only as this is the sole
subsidiary trading company. As such, every time monies are
raised there is a subsequent intercompany loan taken out between
the two companies.
At the election of BGL, the Loan
Notes (together with accrued interest to date) may be converted (in
whole or in part) at any time prior to redemption into new ordinary
shares of 1 penny each in the capital of the Company
("Ordinary Shares") at a conversion price of £0.0325 per share. BGL also
received warrants to subscribe for up to 60,000,000 Ordinary Shares
at a price of £0.04 per share exercisable at any time until 26 January 2025 (the
"Warrants").
Summary terms of the Loan
Notes
·
Issue of £2,400,000 unsecured convertible loan
notes due for redemption on 30 November 2024;
·
The Loan Notes are denominated in units
of £10,000,
are unsecured and will attract interest at a rate of 8 per cent per
annum, compounded daily until redemption or conversion;
·
The Loan Notes, including accrued interest, are
convertible at any time prior to cash redemption, at the holder's
election, into new Ordinary Shares at a price of £0.0325 per Ordinary Share (the
"Conversion Shares");
·
BGL shall also receive Warrants to subscribe for
up to 60,000,000 new Ordinary Shares at a price
of 4
pence per
Ordinary Share at any time during the 2-year period following the
grant date; and
·
Pursuant to the Loan Note agreement, BGL has the
right to appoint a non-executive director to the Board,
subject, inter alia, to the consent of the
Company's Nominated Adviser with respect to suitability.
The proceeds from the Loan Notes
will also contribute towards the expansion
of the Company's Homase Mine, seeking to increase production and improvement of the recovery
of the heap leach operation, which is currently yielding 65% of the
contained gold delivered to the heap. The proceeds will also
contribute towards the purchase of plant and equipment to assist in
reducing the operating costs of the operation. The Company
also reviewed the exploration programme along strike and down dip
of the current JORC resource, as well as
exploring the anomalies that were identified, referred to in the 24
March 2022 announcement, with the soil sampling and auguring
programme.
The accrued and unpaid fees to 31
December 2022 due to Bill Trew, Non-Executive Director of the
Company (resigned 1 April 2024) during the year, amount
to £52,650, were converted into 1,442,465 new Ordinary Shares
at a conversion price of 3.65p, being the mid-market closing price
of the Company's Ordinary Shares on 30 January 2023, this was the
latest practicable date prior to this announcement (the
"Director Fee Conversion Shares"). The Director Fee Conversion
Shares were issued to Oxus Mining Limited, a Company solely owned
and controlled by Bill Trew, whose direct and indirect resulting
beneficial interest in the Company's Ordinary Shares following the
issue of the Director Fee Conversion Shares will be as shown
below.
Name
|
Number of Ordinary Shares
Currently Owned
|
Number of Fee Conversion
Shares
|
Resultant Shareholding in
the Company
|
Percentage of the issued
Share Capital of the Company
|
William (Bill) Trew
|
129,656,575
|
1,442,465
|
131,099,040*
|
26.30%
|
*
Of which, 125,656,575 Ordinary Shares are held by Paracale Gold
Limited, a company of which Mr William Trew is a director and a
significant shareholder, 4,000,000 are held directly by Mr Trew and
1,442,465 Ordinary Shares, being the Director Fee Conversion
Shares, will be held by Oxus Mining Limited.
On 5 April 2023, the Company
provided a comprehensive update on the diamond drilling undertaken
in 2022 at the former Akrokeri Underground Mine ("AUM") and the
soil and auger geochemical programmes within the Akrokeri and
Homase prospecting licences, ("AKHM").
This diamond drilling programme at
AUM, confirmed the Company's belief that the Akrokeri
mineralization occupies a significant structural corridor that
extends to both the south and north of the historical underground
mine, with Significant Intercepts 2022/23 diamond drilling
including:
·
22AKDD001: 6.50 metres @ 1.63 g/t from 7.7
metres, including 3.5 metres @ 2.35 g/t;
·
22AKDD002: 4.10 metres @ 11.01g/t from 46.0
metres, including 1 metre @ 41.04g/t;
·
22AKDD003: 3.60 metres @ 5.77g/t from 69.4
metres, including 1 metre @ 12.06g/t;
·
22AKDD006: 5.74 metres @ 3.43g/t from 55.66
metres, including 1.1 metres @ 15.25g/t;
·
22AKDD008: 3.00 metres @ 3.08g/t from 34.8
metres, including 1.0 metre @ 5.23g/t;
·
22AKDD008: 3.70 metres @ 2.54g/t from 72.6
metres, including 2.2 metres @ 4.03g/t;
·
22AKDD009: 4.80 metres @ 7.31 g/t from surface,
including 1.0 metre @ 25.8 g/t;
·
22AKDD015: 1.0 metre @ 4.53 g/t from 61.9
metres;
·
22AKDD015: 1.10 metres @ 11.23 g/t from 95.7
metres, including 0.5 metre @ 20.01 g/t;
·
22AKDD016: 12.0 metres @ 0.93 g/t from 79.3
metres, including 1.6 metres @ 2.97 g/t; and
·
22AKDD019: 2.80 metres @ 1.84 g/t from 72.0
metres, including 2.2 metres @ 2.21g/t.
Key findings showed:
·
A total of 20 diamond drillholes have now been
drilled, 14 probing the southern extension of the South Shaft and
the remaining 6 holes around the North Shaft;
·
Results show the wide mineralised lode hosting
gold at 4.1m @ 11.01 g/t, including 1m @ 41.04 g/t in hole
22AKDD002;
·
Results give strong grounds for continued
exploration and further core drilling at Akrokeri; and
·
At Homase, the results from soil and auger
sampling has confirmed anomalies that demonstrate a new mineralised
zone to the west of the main Homase orebody and also shows further
extension along strike to the north and south of the known Homase
Trend.
The Soil and Auger Sampling
Programmes within the Homase Mineralised Trend that
continued during Q3 and Q4 2022 and into Q1 2023,
were targeting two areas, Esuaya in the north-east and Adubriem
West, and a targeted augering programme was also undertaken over an
area to the south-west of known Homase Trend, with a total of 579
samples collected.
These results were combined with
the historical data to update the geochemical anomalies identified
in the announcements of 17 June 2018 and 25 March 2022. This
exploration has further confirmed the presence of multiple
exploration targets, which are yet to be fully
evaluated.
The Company is confident that the
results of the drilling and geochemical survey programmes completed
over the past three years demonstrate the potential to add to the
total mineral resource and thus considerably extend mining
operations in the coming years. Prioritisation will be given to the
most promising prospects and a more detailed drilling programme
will begin in the coming months, initially focusing on Akrokeri
South and the new Homase geochemical targets.
In addition, the Company is
continuing with the ongoing exploration programme at Akrokeri Underground
Mine.
An operational update was provided
on the 31 May 2023 in relation to mining and production activities
at the Homase Gold Mine in south-western Ghana, with the
following overview:
·
Front-end loaders, tractor and excavators, and the
required plant including a second stacker and vibrating screens
delivered to site with the objective of optimising production at
Homase;
·
~$1.5 million invested into new and
second-hand plant, equipment and components for the second dry
plant and to complete the construction of next pad for the heap
leach operation;
·
Mining production levels forecast for 60,000
tonnes per month of ore, within three months following mine plan
revision during Q1 2023;
·
Revision of mine plan and improvements to the
process plant to improve long-term performance has impacted Q1 2023
production, resulting in a small gold pour of 250 ounces doré for
the quarter; and
·
Second dry plant will allow stacking to increase
to some 40,000 tonnes pcm over the coming months, thus improving
gold production for the remainder of 2023.
Further to 31 May 2023, the
Company has subsequently made significant improvements to the
existing dry plant to enable it to perform more in line with
expectations. The agglomeration drum for the second dry plant
has been completed, the second screen is on order and the
additional 30 metres of conveyors are to be fabricated.
The Company has also purchased two second hand 30 tonne excavators,
two new front end loaders, a truck crane, TLB, tractor and
supporting associated accessories.
In-line with the enhancements to
the dry plant, mining commenced in Pit 2 of the Homase Mine in May
2023, with an initial stripping ratio of 3:1, and to date some
65,300 tonnes of ore have been mined at an inferred grade of
1.1g/t. Stacking recommenced in June 2023, and plant feed has been
maintained at an average of 1,000 tonnes per shift, running on a
single shift basis. The Company can report
that for 2023, some 1,250 ounces
(39 kilos) of fine gold has been
shipped.
After reconciling mine development
and production from 2022, including investigating the issues with
the heap leach process, which have been an on-going problem, and
the impact of no stacking on to the heap for the first six months
of 2023, the Company is currently undertaking a review of its
Homase production plan and forecast.
It was announced that Mr William
(Bill) Trew stood down as Non-Executive Director to the Company on
the 1 April 2024.
On 3 January 2024, the Company
announced a Standstill Agreement with AIMSL in respect of its Gold
Loan agreement. This Standstill Agreement, which was
necessary due to the inability to complete a negotiation on an
extension within the appropriate timeframe, provided the Company
with the potential to defer repayment of the gold loan until 29
June 2024 and has subsequently been extended to 31 December 2025,
as set out below. The Standstill Agreement also set out to
appoint Angela List as the Chair, and for an operational management
team to be mobilised to GoldStone's operations.
On 10 April 2024, the Company
announced that it has conditionally raised £1.82 million before
expenses by way of the Subscription of, in aggregate, 182,000,000
new Ordinary Shares at a price of 1 penny per Subscription Share
together with one Warrant per Subscription Share to subscribe for a
further new Ordinary Share at an exercise price of 2 pence during
the period of 24 months from the date of Admission.
The net proceeds of the
Subscription will be used to partially settle the Company's overdue
creditor balances in line with payment plans agreed with the
Company's major creditors, to progress the Company's strategy of
developing and improving production at its Homase Mine in Ghana and
for general working capital purposes.
As announced on 10 April 2024, the
Company has also entered into an Amendment Agreement with AIMSL in
respect of the Gold Loan Agreement to extend the Standstill Period
under terms of the Standstill Agreement dated 29 December 2023, to
31 December 2025. Pursuant to the Amendment Agreement, AIMSL
has also agreed to accept settlement of the interest accrued under
the Gold Loan Agreement to 31 December 2023 by the issue to AIMSL
of 101,803,680 new Ordinary Shares. Following and subject to issue
of the Conversion Shares, the outstanding balance in respect of the
Gold Loan and accrued interest will be reduced to the principal of
1,871.43 troy ounces and will accrue interest at 14% from 1 January
2024.
The information contained within this announcement is deemed
by the Company to constitute inside information as stipulated under
the Market Abuse Regulation (EU) No. 596/2014 as it forms part of
United Kingdom domestic law by virtue of the European Union
(Withdrawal) Act 2018, as amended by virtue of the Market Abuse
(Amendment) (EU Exit) Regulations 2019.