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Is investing in junior mining stocks worth it?
Will the recent copper shortage be an opportunity for smaller miners?
Will the recent copper shortage be an opportunity for smaller miners?
Will the recent copper shortage be an opportunity for smaller miners?
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I own shares in a junior gold miner from Nevada, $FTCO, and have held a position for a couple of years. Basic thesis was permit delays and the inevitable dividend cut was ignoring the net asset value of the mineral reserves. I was reasonably confident that permits would eventually land, and the company had enough stockpile of ore and cash on hand to weather up to 3 years further delay. Permits starting rolling in early Q4 2025, and Management's careful conservation, zero debt, and liquidity has paid off. YTD the price is up 49%. At current gold prices, I believe the company is presently worth $180-250m and will become more valuable as MI&I reports on 5-7 other properties and/or pits develop. Market cap as of today sits around $142-147m.
I’ve been researching **FTCO (Fortitude Gold Corp.)** and I’m starting to think it could be an interesting play. They’re focused on gold production and have reported consistent dividends, which is rare for a mining company of their size. I’m curious what others think about their long-term prospects. The gold market itself has been pretty active lately, and a smaller player like FTCO could either benefit from the trend or struggle depending on execution. Has anyone here been following them closely? Do you see them as undervalued, or more of a risky bet? Would like to hear your perspectives.
I’ve been following Fortitude Gold (FTCO) closely and I think it has room to move up this week. * Technicals show support around the mid-$3.80s with resistance not far overhead. * Gold price trends have been relatively supportive, which could give a boost. * Recent volume and moving averages are leaning positive. I may add a bit more to my position on Monday if the open looks good. Curious what others think—anyone else watching FTCO?
If that's the case I would like to know. Currently I have positions in FTCO, SD, cwco, elrrf, frsh
When I have a big chunk of change I’m gonna put a bunch in FTCO. They mine gold in Nevada and they have good leadership and competent employees. Pays a monthly dividend, 4 cents. 250k in shares would be like 1,600 a month.
SCHW, FTCO, PPSI, AMPG these been looking good
Of all the gold mining stocks, I like FTCO, monthly dividend, Nevada based, lot of experience on the team, and a commitment to no long term debt.
If you want a good gold mining stock, FTCO is one of the better ones, very good leadership, a commitment to zero debt, mining in Nevada (excellent mining climate), and it pays a monthly dividend.
Said this before and I’ll say it again, FTCO, monthly dividends, gold mining in Nevada, ceo keeps no debt and knows what he’s doing.
If you want monthly dividends, FTCO is a good choice. CEO keeps debt at zero and spun the company off his parent mining company that mined out of Mexico.
I like FTCO they pay a monthly dividend
It’s a massive crowd, I think the loudest voices just reach the most eyes here. Elon is in the cross hairs of a lot of mentally ill and deranged people rn which is what Reddit is full of. Since you seem normal. You seem normal, here are some quality plays I’m in rn, BORR, SJT, LASE, FTCO.
For a straight gold play I like $GORO and $FTCO (Goro spin-off, but no longer a 'penny-stock') for the dividends.
Shameless advertising, but have you got the otc gold miner FTCO, no debt and monthly dividends of .04c for lil above $6
FTCO….fat monthly dividends and solid earnings
I have both FTCO and ERPNF, and I'm considering selling FTCO because I haven't been satisfied with it so far.
I own both FTCO and ERPNF, and I'm considering selling FTCO because I'm not happy with it so far.
I did buy a gold mine with a 7.71% yield call me a boomer $FTCO
So mining is limited, as you can't magically produce more metal in the ground. I missed this in your analysis for FTCO. What is the approx amount of metal they can get out of the ground? You might be investing in a mining company that would have to sell more metal than is in the ground to be a good deal. > will potentially produce 13-16 thousand tonnes of copper cathodes in a few years. Potentially? What is the probability? What are worst-case scenarios? How would they change the value of the company? How dit you price in risk? How big is the risk? Dig, pun intended, deeper.