Gold has finally broken out of the narrow trading range between $640 and $665
an ounce, that has frustrated both bulls and bears alike. Gold bounced off
the 200 day moving average but for most of the Spring failed to break through
the $670 resistance level due to an increase in central bank selling, a bounce
in the US dollar and selling from the ETFs. In addition, seasonal demand is
typically low at this time which was not enough to offset the increased buying
from the hedge buybacks by Barrick, Anglo and Newmont. We view the recent breakout
as another purchase opportunity and remain convinced that gold will trade at
$1000 an ounce before yearend.
Gold's physical demand remains strong, particularly from Asia and the Middle
East. The latest CFTC Gold statistics shows a dramatic reduction in sentiment
which is bullish for gold. Particularly promising is the improved technical
action of the gold stocks which until recently have been laggards. Gold stocks
have shown signs of strength outpacing bullion and we believe that this a key
signal for a major move to the upside. However, the key driver will be the
strong crosscurrents across the world's financial markets. It is our belief
that the gigantic global speculative credit boom which has already created
asset price inflation is a move to hard assets and a prelude to higher inflation.
Gold's turn is next.
Sustainable development is the rage among politicians, my daughter and environmentalists
alike. Yet, more people watched the soccer match between Argentina and Peru
on cable than Al Gore's Live Earth on prime time NBC. What is unsustainable
are developments in the economy.
Since 2002, asset prices have skyrocketed around the world and bubbles have
popped up everywhere from stocks to Chinese paintings to uranium to debt. The
CRB Commodity Index is at a 42 year high. The explosion is rooted in the expansionary
global monetary policy that has flooded the financial system with liquidity.
It involves the United States, the world's biggest economy, continuing to live
beyond its means, running up huge deficits which have resulted in the creation
of record amounts of debt. According to the Bank of International Settlements
(BIS), "the strategy depends on the availability of cheap funding". The liberal
use of leverage and the increasing array of financial instruments made debt
easier to pile up. Cheap debt has underwritten a global "carry trade arbitrage" enabling
the acquisition of higher yielding equity, companies and real estate with cheaper
paper.
Of course this is an unsustainable development.
The
liquidity cycle has turned. Fears of the Chinese flu caused a contraction in
liquidity. The uptick in rates and liquidation of the subprime debt markets
also wiped out the "carry trade", further lessening the level of liquidity.
Finally, with piles of American treasury bills losing value, foreign investors
have converted some of those piles into other asset classes causing a further
contraction in liquidity. The unwinding of the global "carry trade arbitrage" is
at hand with an increase in borrowing costs.
Almost at the same time, global interest rates have increased sharply. Bond
prices crashed and yields on European and Japanese bonds climbed. The backup
in yields follows the European central bank maintaining its main interest rate
at 4.0 percent, the highest level since September 2001. The yield on US ten-year
government bonds registered its biggest jump in years hitting 5.30 percent
before settling back to 5.1 percent. The increase in rates, at long last is
a wake-up call for a complacent market used to stable economic news, low inflation
and massive US deficits.
Competition For Money
There are fears that the sharp rise in yields was driven by a trend towards
central bank tightening. Wrong. We believe that interest rates are rising
because the global trend of excess liquidity has pushed up the value of assets.
Central banks have been on an inflationary money printing binge- witness
the asset inflation of today. As measured by M3, money is being created at
double-digit rates world-wide. For money to have value, it must be ‘dear" and
limited in supply.
The move in interest rates then, is a competition for money, particularly
by weaker currency jurisdictions. For example, the central bank of New Zealand
has increased rates to 8 percent, the highest levels in a decade. At the same
time, New Zealand is pushing money growth as measured by M3 at a 14.6 percent
annual rate in April. New Zealand is not the only one with exuberant monetary
growth. Brazil's M3 is growing at 16.1 percent, Australia's M3 at 13.7 percent
and even South Korea's M3 growth at 12.3 percent. Although the United States
does not measure M3 growth anymore, M3 growth is between 13 to 14 percent range.
The Emperor Has No Clothes
Hit by US sinking subprime loans, the near collapse of Bear Sterns' subprime
hedge funds exposed investors to the harsh mispricing of the $850 billion
mortgaged backed CDOs or collateralised debt obligations which back subprime
mortgages. Merrill Lynch, to realize its collateral, attempted to force the
fire-sale of $850 million of CDOs but could only find sufficient bids for
$200 million. In addition, it was disclosed that up to $2 trillion of debt
was falsely priced and bids for "A" rated securities were placed as low as
30 percent of face value and not the 85 percent for previous "A" rated paper.
So far there have been 87 players that have failed in the wake of the subprime
implosion. Bear Stearns, the biggest broker to the hedge funds is now locked
in a battle with other investment banks. And there are concerns that the
Bear contagion would spread to junk bonds and the red hot leveraged loans.
Risk premiums have increased, spreads have widened and with it excess liquidity
has been extinguished overnight. In any case, investors are demanding greater
protection, higher premiums and less leverage in an attempt to close the
barn door. Amazingly, the subprime mortgages are less than 11 percent of
total outstanding securitized debt. With the credit markets closed, hedge
funds, private equity and the big investment banks just had their portfolios
revalued downward and there is not enough protection or capital.
What is then to hedge investors from the over-extended institutions sitting
with bloated mispriced inventory? The emperor has no clothes and rather a value
of $850 billion, the underlying value of the CDOs on the books of the hedge
funds, investment banks and insurers may be something less than $300 billion.
Indeed, the mark-to-market losses exceed the capital of the big investment
banks that underwrote the CDOs. Are the defaults the tip of the iceberg? No.
Titanic has already sunk. With access to credit becoming tight, the big investment
banks must also handle the bridge financing requirements of the big private
equity buyout boom since the buyers are on strike. Credit markets are not ready
for the big bust. Losses are projected to be even higher because of the "slicing
and dicing" of risk by Wall Street has left buyers illiquid assets. We believe
that the inevitable unwinding of this debt binge will cause a credit crunch
implosion that could easily turn into a harbinger of crisis. Gold is a good
thing to have.
This is Why Gold is a Good Thing to Have
Once upon a time the greenback was good as gold. Under the Bretton Woods Agreement,
the dollar was exchangable into gold which lasted from 1946 to 1971. During
the Bretton Woods era, America's large deficits and prolificacy was sustained
by external borrowings. Gold rose to over $40 an ounce and the Bank of England
together with the Federal Reserve were forced to sell their gold reserves
to maintain a price at $35 an ounce. This gave way in early 1961 to the creation
of the Gold Pool to maintain the price of gold at $35 an ounce. Each time
however, the Americans continued to run significant deficits and US gold
reserves declined. Gold creeped higher. The Americans also fought a war that
they could not afford. The Vietnam War resulted in massive budgetary deficits
and by 1968, the Gold Pool was disbanded (US gold reserves had fallen some
50 percent). For much of this time, the US dollar was supposed to be as good
as gold.
Inflation of course was in double digits for a decade and unemployment not
far behind - an unsustainable development. Bretton Woods fell apart when the
dollar problems began to mount and countries opted for gold instead of dollars.
As a result in August 1971, President Nixon went off the gold standard to avoid
a run on the dollar. Ever bigger deficits ensued, the dollar was devalued and
gold peaked at $850 an ounce in 1980.
Déjà Vu, All Over Again
Since its peak five years ago, the dollar has lost about 35 percent against
the major currencies. America has become the largest debtor in the world.
With record debt loads, and the reluctance by its creditors to invest in
more dollars (there is no gold convertibility anymore), we believe the dollar
will lose another 35 percent. Like the Johnson and Nixon Administrations
in the 1960s and 1970s, the Bush Administration continues to run up huge
budget and current account deficits. Each time, Johnson and Nixon had been
forced to revalue the dollar. Bush has no choice. A sharp fall in the dollar
is in the offing. The worst case scenario? With no savings and credit, the
government's access to borrowing will be cut off, creating a cash crisis
throwing our financial markets into chaos.
Gold is a good thing to have; it is also a barometer of currency fears. The
US government cannot continue to pursue a policy of fiat money inflation. If
people believe the greenback is overvalued and there is no alternative. Gold
is a natural safe harbour. Gold has risen from a low of $255 per ounce for
a 150 percent increase in the past four years. History shows that gold is money.
Gold acts as the world's only true currency. Gold cannot be created like fiat
paper currencies. Because gold's supply is limited and central banks cannot
flood the market; gold represents the ultimate store of value.
A New Currency?
With the dollar so badly flawed, we believe the market will look to alternate
replacements like the euro. After the collapse of the dollar in the mid-eighties,
the Europeans established the European Monetary System as a prelude to the
creation of the euro. The European Monetary System was established following
the breakdown of the Bretton Wood system. The euro today is backed 15 percent
of gold and about 25 percent of all global foreign exchange transactions
now involve the euro.
Despite having trillions of dollars of foreign exchange reserves, the Asian
financial crisis of 10 years ago is still fresh in many Asian central bankers
memories. Today, Japan, Korea and the Philippines maintain flexible exchange
rates, while Hong Kong, Thailand, and Singapore and of course China have managed
floating rates. Unfortunately, all these units are pegged to the greenback
and the pool of dollars is growing at $1 billion a day. At a recent meeting,
finance ministers from ten Asian nations agreed to set up a regional reserve
pool, augmenting a current pact.
The fact that the US borrows entirely in dollars makes its deficits safer
for itself but riskier for its creditors. In essence with growing pools of
foreign exchange reserves, a desire to lower risk, and to avoid a repeat of
the Asian crisis, Asia is expected to establish a common currency unit similar
to the European monetary system with an Asian central bank. Central banks in
South Korea, China, Taiwan and Japan have announced plans to buy other asset
classes with higher returns than low yielding and risky US debt.
More relevant, by establishing another currency bloc, central banks have more
alternatives to the once favoured US dollar. Asian central banks have already
lost their appetites for US treasuries. Despite the increase in yields, a recent
auction of US 10-year bonds attracted only 11 percent of foreign buyers. Beijing
was a net seller of $5.8 billion of US treasuries in April, the first drop
in holdings since October 2005. Gold is a good thing to have since the new
unit will have a gold backing similar to the euro.
Size Matters
Yet, another protectionist measure was introduced by Congress which might make
good electioneering politics but has little to do with anything to force
China to change. Not only is this another impotent form of China-bashing
but while the renminbi has strengthened in the past year, America's deficits
continue to worsen. To resolve the imbalances between China and the United
States, America must look to domestic fiscal policy rather than a shift in
the renminbi. America has allowed politics to prevent a reduction of the
federal deficit and its policy of China-bashing only serves to mask their
real problem. The Bush Administration's proposed defence budget is also a
problem. Bush expects to spend $647 billion including $142 billion to cover
the anticipated costs of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Meanwhile, China's
military budget has increased to modernize its forces and to back its economic
muscle with military muscle. However, this has raised new tensions with the
United States. China's military spending is expected to increase 17.8 percent
this year, but its defence budget is estimated at only US$45 billion. Noteworthy,
is that China's defence budget is still smaller than Britain's, France's
and Japan's. Nonetheless xenophobia has been raised, particularly when China
announced the destruction of a satellite in space with a ground fired missile.
It has been calculated that a 20 percent appreciation of the renminbi would
reduce the US deficit by only $150 billon or so, a rounding error. Instead,
if Americans spent less, saved more, used less energy and consumed less, the
savings of billions would more than offset an increase in the renminbi. Indeed
were the renminbi to increase by 20 percent, it would result in increased import
costs and higher export prices. America has benefited from low import prices,
and that is the problem. America's insatiable appetite for cheap imports and
cheap energy and its reliance on borrowing from the rest of the world. America
needs to borrow $2 billion a day to finance it deficits.
To be sure, an unsustainable development.
Be Careful of What You Wish For
America's position as the world's sole superpower is being challenged by not
only China, but others like India. There are signs that the establishment
of sovereign-wealth funds or clubs with hundreds of billions of dollars is
a reverse form of nationalism or globalisation. However, it puts debtor-nations
such as America at a disadvantage since many of its competitors are also
its creditors. As a result fears of
"hollowing out" are prevalent. Moreover, wannabe superpowers like Russia, flush
with petrodollars hope to capitalize on America's weakness. China already has
the fourth largest economy in the world and in the next decade is projected
to be bigger than every G8 member, except the United States. Economic size
invariably translates into political power and with one of the world's largest
economies together with the largest source of cash, China is expected to rival
America's position on the world's stage.
Ironically while China has $1.33 trillion of foreign exchange reserves, China's
financial system has not kept pace with its industries. China is now the world's
largest source of capital. China's current account surplus has exploded from
$26 billion to $250 billion last year, outpacing that of Japan. China's problem
is that the trade imbalance has resulted in an inflow of dollars due in part
to swelling trade surpluses and the piling up of dollars due foreign exchange
activities. These surplus dollars has represented a problem in that the securitization
or the lack of immunization has resulted in excess liquidity. But this time,
much of this liquidity has flowed into its stockmarkets which have been making
daily highs. China's capital markets are still in their nascent stage with
needed market reforms. Beijing's $3 billion investment in Blackstone is a first
step in establishing a more sophisticated capital market capable of recycling
the trillion dollars in surplus savings. The liberalization of China's financial
markets will likely be part of the upcoming 5-year Communist Party Congress
that is due in October. America should be careful for what they wish for.
Meanwhile, flush with petro-dollars Middle East investments have increased
in size surpassing the cash hoards of the seventies. Two decades later, the
Persian Gulf's $585 billion current account surplus is bigger than that of
China and Japan. The Abu Dhabi Investment Authority has used its oil largesse
to build up a portfolio of international equities with debt and money markets
estimated between $300 and $500 billion overshadowing China's. Instead of high
profile US investments like trophy buildings and Tiffanys, this time, Middle
East investors have instead become more sophisticated, taking lead positions
in hedge funds, big private equity funds as well as participating as joint-venture
partners. The global liquidity pool has a new player.
Investment Strategy - Beneficiary of Hard Asset Investing
China's breakneck growth continues in a vortex-like fashion to suck in raw
materials, especially base metals. China's prodigious appetite has created
supply bottlenecks and helped cause the shift to hard assets, like gold.
The ETFS have also sucked up surplus gold generated by the hedgers. Gold
is tight due to demand from both the hedgers and ETF players. Finally, with
global savings shifting towards China and the Middle East, these nations
prefer to invest in hard assets such as gold rather than paper dollars. For
more than twenty years, the gold industry was stuck in the wilderness due
to low prices which caused a lack of capital spending and exploration. The
deposits of tomorrow have yet to be found simply because the industry itself
has not boosted its exploration budgets enough, preferring to harvest yesterday's
deposits. Hence gold prices are expected to head even higher.
We continue to suggest an over-weighted position in gold stocks with the expectation
that gold will surpass the old high of $850 per ounce this year. The end of
the twenty-year bond market, credit implosion and a major drop in the US dollar
will underpin gold's long term bull market - Indeed we have only just begun.
We also expect a continuation of M&A activity as the seniors scramble to
replace depleted reserves by buying ounces on Bay Street. The flattening of
the industry's gold hedges is a reflection of the long awaited turn in senior
management psychology and the acknowledgment that we are in a gold bull market.
Consequently, we prefer the mid-tier and junior companies with improving production
profiles, blue-sky reserve upside and active exploration programs. To date
there have been few exploration successes and thus the industry is ripe for
surprises on the upside. We would emphasis those juniors with large land packages,
strong management and soundly-based exploration programs. Among the mid-tier
we continue to recommend Kinross Gold, Meridian and Agnico-Eagle.
We also like Crystallex International, Eldorado (particularly
in light of the recent weakness), High River, and Aurizon(which
has brought the new Casa Berardi mine into production). And again we like the
junior package of Contintental, Etruscan, Excellon, St.
Andrew Goldfields, Philex, Unigold and recently added MAG Silver.
COMPANIES
AgnicoEagles Mines Ltd.
Agnico-Eagle had another terrific quarter, as the company benefitted from by-product
credits for zinc, copper and silver which resulted in a negative $332 per
ounce cash cost for mining gold. Agnico will produce 240,000 ounces this
year but will boost production to 1.2 million ounces by 2010, once the five
new mines currently in construction come on stream. The newest, Cumberland
Resources in Nunavut will produce 400,000 ounces in the first year alone.
Agnico recently released drilling results from Pinos Altos in Mexico, where
four drill rigs are turning. In addition, Agnico is sinking an underground
ramp which will give it access to deeper zones in Santo Nino and Cerro Colorado.
Pinos Altos currently has a resource of almost 2 million ounces of gold and
56 million ounces silver. Further drilling is expected to be boost the resource.
We continue to recommend Agnico-Eagle shares because they are among the few
that are spending aggressively and hence possess the best blue sky picture
among the intermediate term players. Buy.
Aurizon Mines Ltd. Aurizon has begun pre-commercial production at its
Casa Berardi mine in the latest quarter. Aurizon produced 32,000 ounces of
gold and is expected to produce about 175,000 ounces this year at a cash cost
of about $275 an ounce. Aurizon plans to boost the mill from the 1600 tonnes
to 2,200 tonnes per day which would allow it to boost production. Aurizon is
also conducting an active drill program in the Kipawa Basin in the Quebec area
for uranium where it possesses the largest land holding. We continue to recommend
Aurizon as a developing mid-tier candidate.
Barrick Gold Corp.
Barrick reported a first quarter loss of $159 million due to the buyback of
its hedges. Noteworthy is that Barrick is still not hedge-free since it continues
to maintain a 9.5 million ounce position to offset the production cost at
billion dollar Pascua-Lama. We support Barrick's buybacks but believe that
they should also flatten the Pascua-Lama hedges, because the company still
maintains an excessive mark-tomarket potential loss. Of more concern, is
that Barrick shares have been underperforming not only because of its hedging
policy but also because despite another round of acquisitions, the company
has not been able to show per share growth. Part of the reason is that mining
for gold is an expensive exercise and Barrick has seen its cash cost increase
from $177 an ounces in 2002 to $350 today. Barrick's gold production profile
over the next couple of years is flat and projects such as Pascua-Lama, Pueblo
Viejo and Donlin Creek possess billion dollar price tags and thus investors
are concerned about Barrick's intermediate term profitability.
Crystallex International Corp.
Crystallex has fulfilled all the necessary requirements for the issuance of
the long awaited final Environmental Permit for the Las Cristinas property
in Venezuela. The Company has even posted a bond and paid taxes and has diligently
purchased everything from hospitals, to roads to equipment in anticipation
of receiving the Environmental Permit. The Company expects to be in production
within 16 months of being granted the Environmental Permit. Crystallex is
probably the answer to a lot the majors' problems of lack of reserves. In
our view, Las Cristanas is one of the most important undeveloped gold deposits
in the world and with reserves in excess of 15 million ounces, an enviable
target. The question is when and how the bidding will begin. We believe that
a major is already well positioned and expect at least two other suitors
to the table once the permit is granted. Consequently give the potential
risk/reward, we believe Crystallex shares are undervalued and a buy here.
Eldorado Gold Corp.
Eldorado Gold successfully brought the Kisladag mine, Turkey's largest gold
mine into production and reported first quarter production of 76,000 ounces.
Cash costs have increased slightly partly due the Chinese Tanjianshan mine
which also came into production. Eldorado is an emerging second-tier gold
producer and should produce 400,000 ounces in 2009, up from the current 250,000
ounces. However, a court injunction to halt operations at the Kisladag mine
until the court rules on an appeal of a lower decision to confirm the legality
of Eldorado's environmental impact assessment shocked the markets. We believe
the shares have over discounted what maybe a ‘tempest in a teapot".
The decision is only expected t take only 30-90 days so the closure might
prove to be short. We continue to recommend the shares particularly on this
pullback as the assets remain in place.
Gammon Gold Inc.
Gammon Gold is still in the construction phase at the Ocampo gold project in
Northern Mexico. The company plans an ambitious combination heap/leach underground
operation, but rain created havoc with the heap/leach operation. The company
has recently changed personnel and while the property is well drilled off,
we are concerned about the execution risk and note that production guidance
continues to be ratcheted down. While the company is well financed, our model
suggests there is room for disappointment and thus we believe the company
is way ahead of itself. Gammon is an expensive stock and the shares are vulnerable
to disappointment. Sell.
Goldcorp Inc.
Goldcorp reported a disappointing first quarter of $0.18 per share versus $0.27
per share. While Goldcorps's gold production nearly doubled, cash costs increased
and the company is plagued by
"hardening" assets at this stage and maybe one deal too many. The acquisition
of Glamis added four new mines but resulted in whopping dilution. The company
took a loss on the sale of the Peak mine in Australia which was a good idea
since the Peak mine had already peaked in production. Goldcorp's problem is
that like the majors, it cannot show near term growth in ounces on a per share
basis. Long term projects such the Peñasquito gold/silver/zinc in Mexico
are too far off, as well as Éléonore and Pueblo Viejo. Peñasquito's
price tag keeps going up and we question if billion dollar projects makes much
sense or even money today. There is still need for a further consolidation
and the pruning of assets, including Goldcorp's Porcupine, Musslewhite and
La Coipa interests. Sell.
Newmont Mining Corp.
Newmont like Barrick spent more than $500 million to buy back 1.85 million
ounces to flatten their hedge book. The company has already decided to unscramble
the omelette and will sell the merchant banking assets, Newmont Capital which
was a key part of Franco-Nevada which was bought five years ago. Newmont
will take an asset impairment charge of $1.7 billion which is really part
of the goodwill portion of the Franco acquisition. In sweeping out the old,
newly appointed president Richard O'Brien is taking away a key asset generator
that actually created value. While we concur with the elimination of the
gold hedge book, we think it is a misguided decision to sell the merchant
banking portfolio, which ironically may end up in the hands of the original
creators - déjà vu? Neither the sale of Newmont Capital nor
the flattening of the hedges will solve Newmont's problem and that is to
replace reserves and a flat production profile. Newmont will still have to
spend heavily at Yanacocho in Peru and is in need of much better mines than
Leeville and problem prone Phoenix which recently came into production. Because
of the permitting time line and problems with power in Ghana, Newmont is
need of a fill-in acquisition. The $1 billion plus convertible debentures
will do little for the balance sheet but hurt the common. We continue to
prefer the mid-cap producers despite the long-term value. We would be sellers
here.
MAG Silver Corporation
MAG continues to add to the growing resource of the Penoles/MAG Juanicipo joint
venture (almost 8,000 ha)in Zacatecas, Mexico. The Company recently extended
the strike length beyond 1 km and drilling to date has outlined about a 1.3
km of strike length. Most recent results show wider widths and bonanza type
grades continue to be recorded. Juanacipo is about 5 km from the world's
largest silver mine at Fresnillo. Penoles has three drills working on the
site and plans to commit two more and is fast tracking the exploration program.
We believe that Penoles will ultimately takeover the 44 percent they do not
own at a healthy premium but MAG has seven other projects in Mexico including
the promising Batopilas in Chihuahua state. Of interest is that MAG also
has a carbonate replacement deposit in Cinco de Mayo in Northern Mexico similar
to our favoured Excellon's Platosa play. Buy.
Meridian Gold Inc.
Yamana Gold has made a hostile bid for Meridian using the cash from Northern
Orion Resources. Yamana plans a three-way merger with Northern Orion and
is making a part cash/part share bid for Meridian. The shareholdings on a
performa basis would give Yamana shareholders 53.4 percent, Meridian shareholders
34 percent and Northern Orion 12.6 percent. Meridian owns the world class
El Penon mine in Chile and we believe the ratios are out of whack. Also despite
Yamana's spin, Meridian shareholders will likely look at other potential
merger candidates. In addition, Yamana is paying nothing for Esquel in Argentina,
which we believe is promising, with 3.8 million ounces of reserves in place.
Hold for a higher takeout price.
USGold Corp.
Rob McEwen continues to add value to the gold sector and his newly created
USGold has outperformed the seniors. With an excellent land position in Nevada
and the consummation of the takeover of Nevada juniors, US Gold has the land
position of a senior and the exploration budget of a senior without being
plagued with the growth profile of a senior, proximity to major deposits
of the seniors. US Gold plans to spend over $30 million over the next 2 years,
testing an array of targets whose focus is to acquire another Cortez Hill
or Pipeline deposit. We like US Gold here.

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Analyst Disclosure
| Company Name |
Trading Symbol |
*Exchange |
Disclosure code |
| Barrick Gold |
ABX |
T |
1 |
| Kinross |
K |
T |
1 |
| Continental Minerals |
KMK |
V |
1,5 |
| Crystallex |
KRY |
T |
1 |
| Excellon |
EXN |
V |
1 |
| High River Gold |
HRG |
T |
1,5 |
| Philex |
PGI |
V |
1 |
| St. Andrew Goldfields |
SAS |
T |
1,5 |
| Unigold |
UGD |
V |
1 |
Disclosure Key: 1=The Analyst, Associate or member of
their household owns the securities of the subject issuer. 2=Maison Placements
Canada Inc. and/or affiliated companies beneficially own more than 1% of any
class of common equity of the issuers. 3=<Employee name> who is an officer
or director of Maison Placements Canada Inc. or it's affiliated companies serves
as a director or advisory Board Member of the issuer. 4=In the previous 12
months a Maison Analyst received compensation from the subject company. 5=Maison
Placements Canada Inc. has managed co-managed or participated in an offering
of securities by the issuer in the past 12 months. 6=Maison Placements Canada
Inc. has received compensation for investment banking and related services
from the issuer in the past 12 months. 7=Maison is making a market in an equity
or equity related security of the subject issuer. 8=The analyst has recently
paid a visit to review the material operations of the issuer. 9=The analyst
has received payment or reimbursement from the issuer regarding a recent visit.
T-Toronto; V-TSX Venture; NQ-NASDAQ; NY-New York Stock Exchange