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Surface Metals (CSE:SUR,OTCQB:SURMF) is a diversified exploration and development company advancing a portfolio of lithium and precious metals assets aligned with the global push for electrification and gold as a strategic hedge.

The company’s flagship Cimarron Gold Project in Nevada is a high-grade, underexplored oxide gold system with historic drilling by major operators including Newmont and Echo Bay. Located at the north end of the San Antonio Mountains, approximately 18 miles north of Tonopah, Cimarron hosts shallow, structurally controlled, low-sulfidation epithermal gold mineralization. Surface Metals holds a 90% interest in the project through its U.S. subsidiary, Surface Metals US Inc. The project consists of 31 lode claims in the historic San Antonio (Cimarron) mining district.

Through its subsidiary ACME Lithium US, Surface Metals is developing a suite of lithium projects in Nevada and Manitoba, Canada. These include:

  • Clayton Valley: a lithium brine asset with a defined resource,
  • Fish Lake Valley: a claystone-hosted lithium project,
  • Shatford and Cat-Euclid claims: pegmatite-rich assets in Manitoba, developed in partnership with Snow Lake Resources.

With exposure to both critical battery metals and gold, Surface Metals is strategically positioned to capitalize on dual macroeconomic trends—electrification and financial resilience.

Company Highlights

  • Dual Focus Portfolio: Combines precious metals and energy transition minerals, including a 90 percent stake in the Cimarron gold project and multiple lithium assets in Nevada and Manitoba.
  • Gold Asset with Legacy Database: Cimarron contains over 190 historical drill holes with high-grade intercepts and a non-compliant historic resource of 50,000+ oz gold, open in multiple directions.
  • NI 43-101 Lithium Resource: The Clayton Valley project hosts an inferred lithium carbonate equivalent (LCE) resource of 302,900 tonnes, backed by geophysics, drilling and pumping test data.
  • Strategic Lithium Locations: Lithium claims are adjacent to Albemarle’s Silver Peak mine and Ioneer’s Rhyolite Ridge development in Nevada, and contiguous to the Tanco mine in Manitoba.
  • Experienced Leadership: Led by resource sector veterans with a track record of successful exits, technical development and public company management.
  • Energy Transition Strategy: Well-positioned to benefit from macro tailwinds in lithium demand and US domestic critical minerals supply chain policies.

This Surface Metals profile is part of a paid investor education campaign.*

Click here to connect with Surface Metals (CSE:SUR) to receive an Investor Presentation

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Saga Metals Corp. (‘SAGA’ or the ‘Company’) (TSXV: SAGA,OTC:SAGMF) (OTCQB: SAGMF) (FSE: 20H) a North American exploration company focused on critical mineral discovery, is pleased to report a significant breakthrough in its 2025 exploration campaign at the wholly-owned Radar Project in Labrador, Canada. Emerging technical results suggest that the project bears geological similarities to Panzhihua, the world’s leading vanadiferous titanomagnetite (VTM) operation, located in China, which contributes over 40% of global vanadium (V 2 O 5 ) production 1 .

 

With a large oxide layering thickness, a near-monomineralic VTM composition, and extensive mineral tenures, the Radar Project shows the potential to become a globally meaningful VTM project. We use Panzhihua as our deposit model target, however, note that comparable Labradorite-type AMCG deposits are not necessarily indicative of the grades and tonnes of the mineralization within the Dykes River intrusion.

 

  ‘The Radar Project’s mineralogy appears cleaner and more coarse-grained than most VTM deposits, and its vanadium content is similar to Panzhihua. This is a rare combination,’   said Paul McGuigan, P. Geo.  

 

The Company requested that Paul McGuigan, P. Geo., review the results of the 2024-25 drilling program, which comprised 2,209 m of drilling, core logging, and 2,943 assay samples from the Hawkeye zone of the Radar Project. Additionally, the Company engaged Allan R. Miller, PhD, P. Geo., to investigate the petrography and ore microscopy of a preliminary suite of specimens, primarily from the Hawkeye zone.

 

Metallurgical testing is pending. Meanwhile, sufficient core logging, assaying, and petrography have been completed to identify a highly prospective Lower Cumulate Layer with a 100-200 m thick vanadium-rich basal layer within the drilled 600 m thick layered gabbronorite suite.

 

  Radar Ti-V-Fe Project: A Rare Geological Setting  

 

Located just 10 km from Cartwright, Labrador, the 24,175-hectare Radar Property is supported by existing infrastructure including road access, a deep-water port, airstrip, and nearby hydroelectric power. The property completely encompasses the Dykes River Intrusive Complex, a previously underexplored layered mafic body.

 

The Dykes River intrusion is an early, pre-collisional part of the Grenville Province. The Grenville, and its equivalent in Norway, is globally recognized for hosting some of the largest titanium–vanadium–iron oxide-bearing anorthosite massifs, including Lac Tio in Quebec and Tellnes in Norway 2 . This province has long been recognized as a powerhouse for strategic critical minerals, particularly Ti, V, Fe, and P 3 .

 

 

 

   Figure 1:    Radar Property map, depicting aeromagnetic anomalies, oxide layering and the site of the 2025 drill program. The Property is well serviced by road access and is conveniently located near the town of Cartwright, Labrador. A compilation of historical aeromagnetic anomalies is shown. SAGA has demonstrated    the reliability of the regional airborne magnetic surveys after ground-truthing and drilling    in the 2024 and 2025 field programs.  

 

  Radar’s Lower Cumulate Layer is similar to Panzhihua’s Main VTM Zones  

 

Using the data from 2,943 assay samples, plots of TiO 2 vs. Fe/Ti (like those used by Charlier on other Grenville intrusions) tracked the evolution of the parent magmas of the Dykes River Fe–Ti–V oxide system. Similarities in ratios of TiO 2 and V 2 O 5 vs Fe 3 O 4 across multiple drill holes serve to identify the stratiform oxide ore layers. Within the 600 m tested thickness of layered gabbronorite, the chemistry delineates a very promising 300-400 m thickness, called the Lower Cumulate Layer. The highest V 2 O 5 assays are located in the lower 100-200 m, coinciding with the highest-grade intervals of VTMs. The layer is comprised of interlayered gabbronorite and bands of semi-massive to massive VTM.

 

Drill holes R25-HEZ-01, -07, -04, and -05 intersect this Lower Cumulate Layer. The chemistry indicates that the layer was deposited from a single, large-volume pulse of Ti-V-Fe-enriched magma (as shown in the consistency in the graphs plotted in Figure 2 below).

 

  ‘The remarkable aspect is that 80% of the samples are of the same species of VTM, which is quite rare and due to the simple mineralogy,’   stated   Paul McGuigan, P.Geo.  

 

SAGA’s Technical Consultant, Paul McGuigan, P.Geo., further identified that the lower 200–400 m of Hawkeye’s mafic sequence comprises high-grade, rhythmically-layered VTM, with consistent TiO 2 , Fe 3 O 4 and V 2 O 5 ratios. Like Panzhihua 4 , the best grades at Hawkeye occur where individual VTM layers coalesce in the lower layers of a labradorite-AMCG type intrusion.

 

  •   Host Rock : Gabbronorite with layered massive and disseminated titanomagnetite
  •  

  •   Mineralogy : Coarse-grained titanomagnetite is pronounced in the massive cumulate VTM
  •  

  •   Oxide Textures : Immiscible magnetite–ilmenite indicating primary magmatic segregation
  •  

  •   Stratigraphy : Cumulate layering dipping inward, similar to a lopolith intrusion
  •  

 
  Figure 2:    TiO    2   vs Fe/Ti for Lower Cumulate Layer showing similar magmatic differentiation trends.  

 

The Lower Cumulate Layer at Radar, drilled in Holes R25-HEZ-01, -04, -05, and -07, features:

 

 

 

   Table 1:    Lower Cumulate Layer highlighting the length of VTM intersections.  

 

At the heart of SAGA’s breakthrough is the Hawkeye Zone, part of the Dykes River Complex. Recent petrographic work by Dr. Allan R. Miller confirms the presence of semi-massive to massive titanomagnetite hosted in gabbronorite cumulate layers. The mineralogy and assays in the lower Hawkeye zone are strikingly similar to those at Panzhihua 5 , where multiple layers of VTM mineralization—ranging from 1 to 30 meters in thickness and aggregating up to 100 m thick—are extracted for pig iron and vanadium.

 

  Drilling Confirms High-Grade Intervals Across Large Stratigraphy  

 

To summarize the 2,209 m drill program results, assays were grouped with core logging and a calculated VTM content to conform to the interpreted magmatic layering, as follows:

 

  •   Semi-massive to massive VTM (> 35% VTM) is logged as intercumulus VTM with layers of massive VTM and mostly logged as ‘Magnetite Layering.’
  •  

  •   Heavily disseminated VTM (> 20% VTM) is mostly intercumulus to coarse-grained gabbronorite.
  •  

Notwithstanding the ‘heavily disseminated VTM’ characterization, significant length-weighted averages at Hawkeye are in the range of 20 to 35% VTM. In other mafic layered intrusions, that tenor of mineralization lies within an economic range. Herein, we focus on the semi-massive to massive intervals only.

 

 

 

   Table 2:    SAGA’s 2024/2025 winter drilling program completed 2,209 m of drilling over 7 holes and collected 2,943 samples.  

 

 

 

   Table 3:    Summary of Saga Metals Radar Project 2025 drill results with   VTM calculation & classification.  

 

Key findings from Table 2 above include:

 

  • Intersections ranging from 187 m to 311 m of VTM-bearing cumulates.
  •  

  • Length-weighted average grades of 22.95% to 29.59% VTM over these intervals.
  •  

  • Peak intervals exceed 10 m of 41.3% VTM.
  •  

  • Vanadium concentrations are highest in the lowermost stratigraphy, double that in the upper layers.
  •  

  Radar Project’s Exploration Guidance – Strategic Significance  

 

Review of this recent assay and petrography data highlights the exceptional potential of Saga Metals’ Radar property. The Dykes River mafic intrusion is a Labradorite-type AMCG layered intrusion , of the same composition and setting as intrusions hosting both titanomagnetite- and ilmenite-dominated deposits, such as the largest hard-rock titanium deposits worldwide, as follows:

 

  • Lac Tio, Quebec (Rio Tinto), a 154 million tonne, massive ilmenite deposit 6 .
  •  

  • Tellnes (Norway) (Titania AS, a subsidiary of Kronos Worldwide), a 380 million tonne, semi-massive ilmenite-titanomagnetite deposit 7 .
  •  

  • Panzhihua, China (Panzhihua Iron and Steel Group), a 1,333 million tonne deposit of VTM, with lesser ilmenite 8 .
  •  

Worldwide, most Labradorite-type AMCG deposits, dominated by VTM, are mined only for their V 2 O 5 content.

 

Notably, the Panzhihua mine produces both a VTM and an ilmenite concentrate, which are used to produce pig iron, V 2 O 5 , and TiO 2 . From the VTM concentrates only, the mine produces high-purity pig iron and over 42,000 tonnes/year of V 2 O 5 , which accounts for approximately 40% of the yearly world vanadium production 9 .

 

Modelling of the VTM contents at the Hawkeye zone Lower Cumulate Layer returns a targeted VTM concentrate very similar to Panzhihua VTM concentrates. Despite an abundance of world resources for Ti ores, the industry continues to prospect for better quality concentrates, principally because of processing costs and waste disposal problems associated with the high iron and trace-element contents of ilmenite and titanomagnetite. The simple, coarse-grained VTM mineralization at Saga Metals’ Radar Project has the potential for a clean VTM concentrate with high recovery.

 

   The deposits within comparable Labradorite-type AMCG deposits are not necessarily indicative of the grades and tonnes of the mineralization within the Dykes River intrusion.   

 

  The Hawkeye Zone at Saga Metals Radar Project:  

 

Hawkeye is the first return of data from a very extensive gabbronorite Ti-V-Fe oxide layer in the Dykes River intrusion. The exploration focus is now significantly improved by the new data:

 

  • About 24 km of strike length of the Ti-V-Fe oxide layer is indicated by mapping and aeromagnetic data.
  •  

  • 2025 drilling has defined the Lower Cumulate Layer, but drilling did not fully test the lower levels.
  •  

  • The tremendous size of the exploration target will require a combination of surface trench sampling and detailed aeromagnetic surveys to test the full width and strike length of the newly identified Lower Cumulate Layer.
  •  

Dr. Miller’s petrographic work revealed coarse-grained vanadiferous titanomagnetite (VTM) as the dominant mineral phase. Ilmenite, while present, exists primarily to date as intercumulus individual grains and minor inclusions (exsolution lamellae with trellis texture) within VTM, meaning processing flowsheets could theoretically prioritize VTM concentrate production for recovery of pig iron, V 2 O 5 and TiO 2 —similar to Panzhihua’s strategy. Processing options open the door for the recovery of TiO 2 .

 

  Q3 and Q4 2025 Initiatives Planned at the Radar Project:  

 

 Saga Metals intends to complete further delineation drilling in 2025 and initiate metallurgical testing focused on concentrate recoverability and DRI-EAF furnace compatibility. Saga plans to:

 

  • Expand drilling across the priority targets within the Dykes River Complex
  •  

  • Conduct an aeromagnetic survey and 3D magnetic inversion to target the highest-grade portions of the Lower Cumulate Layer
  •  

  • Commence metallurgical bench-scale testing
  •  

  • Initiate preliminary engineering for concentrate recovery and smelting
  •  

With its proximity to infrastructure and strong mineralogy, the Company’s goal is to establish Radar as a strategic candidate for domestic titanium, vanadium, and pig iron production, particularly as North America pursues secure supplies of energy storage metals.

 

  ‘This isn’t just another VTM project,’   said   Saga Metals Corp. CEO, Mike Stier.   ‘We aim to prove that Radar could be one of the most significant North American VTM discoveries in a generation, with the goal of competing with global titans like Panzhihua.’  

 

  Qualified Person  

 

Paul J. McGuigan, P. Geo., is an Independent Qualified Person as defined under National Instrument 43-101 and has reviewed and approved the technical information related to the Radar Ti-V-Fe Project disclosed in this news release.

 

  About Saga Metals Corp.  

 

 Saga Metals Corp. is a North American mining company focused on the exploration and discovery of a diversified suite of critical minerals that support the global transition to green energy. The Radar Titanium Project comprises 24,175 hectares and entirely encloses the Dykes River intrusive complex, mapped at 160 km² on the surface near Cartwright, Labrador. Exploration to date, including a 2,200 m drill program, has confirmed a large and mineralized layered mafic intrusion hosting vanadiferous titanomagnetite (VTM) with strong grades of titanium and vanadium.

 

The Double Mer Uranium Project, also in Labrador, covers 25,600 hectares featuring uranium radiometrics that highlight an 18 km east-west trend, with a confirmed 14 km section producing samples as high as 0.428% U 3 O 8 and uranium uranophane was identified in several areas of highest radiometric response (2024 Double Mer Technical Report).

 

Additionally, SAGA owns the Legacy Lithium Property in Quebec’s Eeyou Istchee James Bay region. This project, developed in partnership with Rio Tinto, has been expanded through the acquisition of the Amirault Lithium Project. Together, these properties cover 65,849 hectares and share significant geological continuity with other major players in the area, including Rio Tinto, Winsome Resources, Azimut Exploration, and Loyal Metals.

 

With a portfolio that spans key minerals crucial to the green energy transition, SAGA is strategically positioned to play an essential role in the clean energy future.

 

  On Behalf of the Board of Directors  

 

  Mike Stier, Chief Executive Officer  

 

For more information, contact:

 

Rob Guzman, Investor Relations
Saga Metals Corp.
Tel: +1 (844) 724-2638
Email: rob@sagametals.com
www.sagametals.com

 

  Neither the TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Service Provider (as that term is defined in the policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release.  

 

  Cautionary Disclaimer  

 

This news release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of applicable securities laws that are not historical facts. Forward-looking statements are often identified by terms such as ‘will’, ‘may’, ‘should’, ‘anticipates’, ‘expects’, ‘believes’, and similar expressions or the negative of these words or other comparable terminology. All statements other than statements of historical fact, included in this release are forward-looking statements that involve risks and uncertainties. In particular, this news release contains forward-looking information pertaining to the exploration of the Company’s Radar Project. There can be no assurance that such statements will prove to be accurate and actual results and future events could differ materially from those anticipated in such statements. Important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from the Company’s expectations include, but are not limited to, changes in the state of equity and debt markets, fluctuations in commodity prices, delays in obtaining required regulatory or governmental approvals, environmental risks, limitations on insurance coverage, inherent risks and uncertainties involved in the mineral exploration and development industry, particularly given the early-stage nature of the Company’s assets, and the risks detailed in the Company’s continuous disclosure filings with securities regulations from time to time, available under its SEDAR+ profile at www.sedarplus.ca. The reader is cautioned that assumptions used in the preparation of any forward-looking information may prove to be incorrect. Events or circumstances may cause actual results to differ materially from those predicted, as a result of numerous known and unknown risks, uncertainties, and other factors, many of which are beyond the control of the Company. The reader is cautioned not to place undue reliance on any forward-looking information. Such information, although considered reasonable by management at the time of preparation, may prove to be incorrect and actual results may differ materially from those anticipated. Forward-looking statements contained in this news release are expressly qualified by this cautionary statement. The forward-looking statements contained in this news release are made as of the date of this news release and the Company will update or revise publicly any of the included forward-looking statements only as expressly required by applicable law.

 

___________________________________
1
Panzhihua, China  
2 Lac Tio & Tellnes  
3 Grenville Province (1) , Grenville Province (2)  
4 Panzhihua, China  
5 Panzhihua, China  
6 Rio Tinto Annual Report, 2021  
7 Tellnes  
8 Hong Zhong and Weiguang Zhu (2006): Geochronology of layered mafic intrusions from the Pan–Xi area in the Emeishan large igneous province, SW China. Mineralium Deposita 41, 599-606.
9 Panzhihua, China & Mineral Commodity Study 2020  

 

Photos accompanying this announcement are available at:
https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/0d7c6293-1647-4992-b5da-cef2026792aa   
  https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/958d6e6a-6d77-460a-aa53-8c9d83b7a54e   
  https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/ca41a582-f2ae-4284-843a-a1227acedc87   
  https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/54a65049-4b87-46db-ae87-f6319a933345   
  https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/c77766be-bb66-4c57-b8cb-5b882fc9c425  

 

   

 

 

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‘Not for distribution to United States newswire services or for dissemination in the United States.’

 

Forte Minerals Corp . (‘ Forte ‘ or the ‘ Company ‘) ( CSE: CUAU ) ( OTCQB: FOMNF ) ( Frankfurt: 2OA ) is pleased to announce a non-brokered private placement with a strategic investor (the ‘ Investor ‘), who will acquire 6,326,066 common shares at a price of C$0.90 per share for gross proceeds of approximately C$5,693,459 (the ‘ Strategic Placement ‘). Upon closing of the Strategic Placement, the Investor will own 9.99% of Forte’s issued and outstanding common shares on a non-diluted basis, establishing a meaningful long-term position in Forte’s growth and exploration strategy.

 

The C$0.90 offering price reflects a premium to Forte’s current market value, underscoring the Investor’s conviction in the Company’s long-term potential.

 

Patrick Elliott, President and CEO of Forte, commented: ‘This strategic investment marks a significant milestone for the company. It reflects strong conviction in the long-term value of our portfolio and validates the quality of our exploration pipeline. We’re excited to begin what we see as a long-term, collaborative relationship that supports our vision to unlock meaningful copper and gold discoveries in Perú.

 

The proceeds from the Strategic Placement will be primarily used to advance Forte’s Alto Ruri high-sulfidation epithermal gold project in Perú (‘ Alto Ruri ‘), with at least 80% of the funds dedicated to exploration activities at Alto Ruri. The remaining funds will support general working capital and corporate purposes.

 

In connection with the Strategic Placement, Forte and the Investor will enter into an Investor Rights Agreement whereby the Investor is entitled to certain rights, subject to the Investor maintaining certain ownership thresholds in the Company, including technical information sharing rights and the right to participate in future equity financings and top-up its holdings in relation to dilutive issuances in order to maintain its percentage ownership interest in the Company. The Investor has also agreed to voting support and standstill covenants.

 

In addition, under the Investor Rights Agreement the Investor and Forte will:

 

  • form a joint technical advisory committee; and
  •  

  • collaborate on community engagement and long-term access strategies.
  •  

The closing of the Strategic Placement is expected to occur on or around July 23, 2025, subject to regulatory approvals. All shares issued pursuant to the Strategic Placement will be subject to a statutory hold period of four months and one day from the closing date.

 

This investment signals a firm belief in Forte’s vision, technical leadership and the significant long-term value potential of Alto Ruri. This collaboration marks a major step in executing the strategy Forte has been actively advancing; to deliver pipeline projects that fuel the major developers and producers.

 

  ABOUT Forte Minerals CORP.  

 

 Forte Minerals Corp. is an exploration company with a strong portfolio of high-quality copper (Cu) and gold assets (Au) in Perú. Through a strategic partnership with GlobeTrotters Resources Perú S.A.C. , the Company gains access to a rich pipeline of historically drilled, high-impact targets across key mineral belts.

 

Forte is committed to responsible resource development, creating long-term value, and fostering lasting partnerships with stakeholders and communities.

 

  On behalf of   Forte Minerals CORP.  

 

(signed) ‘ Patrick Elliott’  
Chief Executive Officer

 

  For further information, please contact:  
Forte Minerals Corp.
office: (604) 983-8847
info@forteminerals.com  
www.forteminerals.com  

 

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  Certain statements included in this press release constitute forward-looking information or statements (collectively, ‘forward-looking statements’), including those identified by the expressions ‘anticipate’, ‘believe’, ‘plan’, ‘estimate’, ‘expect’, ‘intend’, ‘may’, ‘should’ and similar expressions to the extent they relate to the Company or its management. The forward-looking statements are not historical facts but reflect current expectations regarding future results or events. This press release contains forward looking statements relating to the terms of the Strategic Placement, the timing for completion of the Strategic Placement and the intended use of proceeds of the Strategic Placement. These forward-looking statements and information reflect management’s current beliefs and are based on assumptions made by and information currently available to the Company with respect to the matter described in this press release. Forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties, which are based on current expectations as of the date of this release and subject to known and unknown risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied by such statements. Additional information about these assumptions and risks and uncertainties is contained under ‘Risk Factors and Uncertainties’ in the Company’s latest management’s discussion and analysis, which is available under the Company’s SEDAR+ profile at www.sedarplus.ca, and in other filings that the Company has made and may make with applicable securities authorities in the future.  

 

  Forward-looking statements are not a guarantee of future performance and involve risks, uncertainties and assumptions which are difficult to predict. Factors that could cause the actual results to differ materially from those in forward-looking statements include the continued availability of capital and financing, and general economic, market or business conditions. Forward-looking statements contained in this press release are expressly qualified by this cautionary statement. These statements should not be read as guarantees of future performance or results. Such statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause actual results, performance or achievements to be materially different from those implied by such statements. Although such statements are based on management’s reasonable assumptions, there can be no assurance that the statements will prove to be accurate or that management’s expectations or estimates of future developments, circumstances or results will materialize. The Company assumes no responsibility to update or revise forward-looking information or statements to reflect new events or circumstances unless required by law. Readers should not place undue reliance on the Company’s forward-looking statements.  

 

  Neither the Canadian Securities Exchange (the ‘CSE’) nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in the policies of the CSE) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release.  

 

   

 

 

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Consumer prices rose in June as President Donald Trump’s tariffs began to slowly work their way through the U.S. economy.

The consumer price index, a broad-based measure of goods and services costs, increased 0.3% on the month, putting the 12-month inflation rate at 2.7%, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Tuesday. The numbers were right in line with the Dow Jones consensus, though the annual rate is the highest since February.

Excluding volatile food and energy prices, core inflation picked up 0.2% on the month, with the annual rate moving to 2.9%, with the annual rate in line with estimates. The monthly level was slightly below the outlook for a 0.3% gain.

A worker prices produce at a grocery store in San Francisco, California, US, on Friday, June 7, 2024.David Paul Morris / Bloomberg via Getty Images

Prior to June, inflation had been on a generally downward slope for the year, with headline CPI at a 3% annual rate back in January and progressing gradually slower in the subsequent months despite fears that Trump’s trade war would drive prices higher.

While the evidence in June was mixed on how much influence tariffs had over prices, there were signs that the duties are having an impact.

Vehicle prices fell on the month, with prices on new vehicles down 0.3% and used car and trucks tumbling 0.7%. However, tariff-sensitive apparel prices increased 0.4%. Household furnishings, which also are influenced by tariffs, increased 1% for the month.

Shelter prices increased just 0.2% for the month, but the BLS said the category was still the largest contributor to the overall CPI gain. The index rose 3.8% from a year ago. Within the category, a measurement of what homeowners feel they could receive if they rented their properties increased 0.3%. However, lodging away from home slipped 2.9%.

Elsewhere, food prices increased 0.3% for the month, putting the annual gain at 3%, while energy prices reversed a loss in May and rose 0.9%, though they are still down marginally from a year ago. Medical care services were up 0.6% while transportation services edged higher by 0.2%.

With the rise in prices, inflation-adjusted hourly earnings fell 0.1% in June, the BLS said in a separate release. Real earnings increased 1% on an annual basis.

Markets largely took the inflation report in stride. Stock market indexes were mixed while Treasury yields were mostly negative.

Amid the previously muted inflation ratings, Trump has been urging the Federal Reserve to lower interest rates, which it has not done since December. The president has insisted that tariffs are not aggravating inflation, and has contended that the Fed’s refusal to ease is raising the costs the U.S. has to pay on its burgeoning debt and deficit problem.

Central bankers, led by Chair Jerome Powell, have refused to budge. They insist that the U.S. economy is in a strong enough position now that the Fed can afford to wait to see the impact tariffs will have on inflation. Trump in turn has called on Powell to resign and is certain to name someone else to the job when the chair’s term expires in May 2026.

Markets expect the Fed to stay on hold when it meets at the end of July and then cut by a quarter percentage point in September.

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A bipartisan Senate duo want to ensure that a suicide prevention and mental health resource for farmers stays funded.

Sens. Tammy Baldwin, D-Wis., and Joni Ernst, R-Iowa, have joined forces to introduce legislation that would see millions in new funding for the Farm and Ranch Assistance Network, a program the pair first collaborated on in the 2018 Farm Bill.

The program is designed to help create a network for farmers, ranchers and other agriculture workers to have access to stress assistance and mental health programs. There are four regional hubs in Washington, New York, Illinois and Tennessee that act as conduits to aid farmers through the grant-funded program.

‘Too often, the stress, isolation, and physical demands of this job leave them with nowhere to turn when it all gets to be too much,’ Baldwin said of the stress and mental health struggles faced by farmers and agriculture workers.

Indeed, Farmers are about three and half times more likely to die by suicide than the average U.S. population, according to a study from the National Rural Health Association.

Their bill, called the Farmers First Act of 2025, would boost funding for the program by $75 million over the next five years, of which $15 million will be made available each fiscal year starting in 2026 through 2030.

The money would go toward hiring more behavioral health specialists, establish crisis lines, and build referral relationships with health care providers, health centers and critical access hospitals.

‘Iowa farmers work tirelessly from sunrise to sundown – rain or shine – to feed and fuel the world,’ Ernst said. ‘Their work isn’t easy, and mental health issues, including suicide, are too common in our agriculture community, which is why I’m working to ensure farmers have better access to mental health resources.’

The program got a reup in funding in 2020, when a three-year tranche of over $28 million was made available to the regional hubs. That funding was again boosted during the COVID-19 pandemic, when Congress injected an additional $28 million to allow states to maintain their own stress assistance programs. The latter funding was made available through grants of up to $500,000 to the state programs.

The bill is a bicameral effort, too. Reps. Randy Feenstra, R-Iowa, and Angie Craig, D-Minn., are pushing the bill in the House to bolster the program’s funding.

Feenstra argued that refilling the program’s cash coffers would provide ‘farmers with real support in times of crisis.’

‘Agriculture is the economic engine of Iowa, and our farmers and producers work long hours and make unseen sacrifices to feed and fuel our country and the world,’ he said. ‘Those sacrifices can take a toll on our farm producers, especially when commodity prices tumble or severe weather destroys crops.’ 

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A group of House conservatives is warning the Senate to leave President Donald Trump’s rescissions package intact as the deadline to consider the spending cuts looms large.

Republicans have until the end of Friday to deal with the bill, the legislative version of the White House’s request to claw back roughly $9.4 billion in funds already allocated by Congress.

Senate Republicans have signaled the bill could change somewhat, however, after passing the House last month.

‘In order to facilitate President Trump’s voter mandate, the Senate must pass the entire $9.4 billion of spending cuts in the rescission bill. Weakening any of these provisions would undermine both his leadership and the discipline our budget urgently demands,’ the letter said.

‘This week, the Senate has a chance to prove its commitment to the voters by passing the long-overdue cuts targeting wasteful, ideologically driven spending programs that have no place in a responsible budget.’

The letter is being led by Rep. Andy Biggs, R-Ariz., a former chairman of the House Freedom Caucus, and signed by 14 other Republican lawmakers.

The bill that passed the House in mid-June would rescind $1 billion in funding from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which doles out federal funding to NPR and PBS. The remaining $8.4 billion targets the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID).

The cuts are part of some $190 billion that the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), formerly led by Elon Musk, identified as part of its mission to slash government waste. 

Trump allies are viewing it as a test run of sorts for what kind of spending cuts Congress’ perilously slim GOP majorities can stomach.

It barely passed the House in a 214 to 212 vote, with four House Republicans voting against it over various concerns, including the impact to local public news stations and funding for HIV/AIDS research in Africa, known as PEPFAR.

Senate Appropriations Committee Chair Susan Collins, R-Maine, told reporters last week the bill ‘needs some significant changes.’

‘For example, I want to strike the rescission of funds for PEPFAR, which has an enormous record of success, having seen some 26 million lives over the course of the program,’ Collins said. ‘I can’t imagine why we would want to terminate that program or the maternal and child health program, which is aimed at providing malnourished pregnant women with important vitamins that they need to deliver healthy babies.’

Sen. Mike Rounds, R-S.D., meanwhile, said he was ‘looking at radio stations in some of the rural areas that do a lot of emergency services’ when discussing what changes he’d want in the bill.

Biggs’ letter warned, ‘This rescission package just scratches the surface. The Left will howl, but this package only trims around the edges of a bloated federal spending apparatus. If Congress can’t even support modest clawbacks, fiscal doom isn’t speculative, it’s inevitable.’

‘President Trump has made it clear: Wasteful, unnecessary, or ideologically driven programs and spending must go. The House acted on this mandate. Now, the Senate must do the same. The House—and more importantly, the American people—will be watching,’ the lawmakers wrote.

‘This is a defining moment. Will the Senate stand firm, reject pressure to preserve the status quo, and reaffirm its commitment to leadership and fiscal responsibility? The answer will shape both the future of President Trump’s presidency and the direction of our nation. Respect the President’s plan. Preserve the cuts passed by the House.’

The rescissions process allows the president to request Congress block some of the discretionary funds it appropriates every fiscal year.

A rescissions package must pass the House and Senate within 45 days of introduction to allow those funds to remain blocked, otherwise they must be released.

However, the process also gives the party in power a fast track by lowering the Senate’s threshold for passage from 60 votes to 51.

House and Senate Republicans are both still dealing with razor-thin majorities of three votes each with full attendance, however, meaning any such vote is almost guaranteed to be close.

When reached for a response, Senate Majority Leader John Thune’s office pointed Fox News Digital to comments the South Dakota Republican made to reporters on Monday.

‘We’re hearing people out, and we are obviously weighing what an amendment process on the floor might look like – what, if any, changes could be made in advance of the floor, but we’re hoping to have a vote to proceed to it tomorrow, and the motion to discharge vote tomorrow, so we’ll have to finalize some of the conversations we’re having with our colleagues about an amendment process prior to that,’ Thune said.

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Former National Security Advisor Mike Waltz is poised to face members of the Senate Tuesday to get the ball rolling on his nomination to represent the U.S. at the United Nations.

Waltz’s appearance before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee comes months after he exited his job at the White House amid controversy surrounding his role in a Signal group chat with other top administration officials. 

Waltz is expected to call for reforms at the U.N. and is expected to say that it’s time to redirect the organization’s focus back to peacekeeping, according to his opening statement shared exclusively with Fox News Digital. Waltz’s statement says that the U.S. has footed the bill for missions that have endured for decades, and amount to nation-building rather than peacekeeping. 

Likewise, Waltz is expected to promise to turn up the heat on countering China and vow to work with the State Department to mitigate Chinese influence. 

‘Countering China is critical,’ a draft of Waltz’s statement says. ‘It’s absurd that the world’s second-largest economy is treated as a developing nation throughout UN agencies that gives China favorable status.’

Waltz’s prepared remarks also urge weeding out ‘pervasive’ antisemitism in the U.N., and claims that the U.N. passed ‘154 resolutions against Israel versus 71 against all other nations combined.’

Additionally, Waltz’s statement calls for slimming down the U.N. with staff cuts, due to an overlap in missions and ‘wasteful’ resources throughout the U.N.’s more than 80 agencies. 

‘It’s worth remembering that, even with cuts, the US is by far the most generous nation in the world,’ Waltz’s draft statement says. 

Democrats vowed to grill Waltz during his confirmation process in the aftermath of the Atlantic magazine’s reporting about a Signal group chat that his team had set up to discuss strikes against the Houthis in March.

Even so, the tough questioning from Democrats on the so-called ‘Signalgate’ issue isn’t expected to derail Waltz’s confirmation to the post, given that Republicans hold a 53–47 majority in the Senate. 

‘It’s all theater — you know he’s going to get confirmed,’ a GOP foreign relations source told Fox News Digital. ‘If Signalgate’s a big thing against him, it wasn’t enough to get anyone else fired or impeached or anything like that.’ 

Waltz, a former congressman who represented Florida’s 6th congressional district, is a retired Army National Guard colonel and former Green Beret. During his time in uniform, he served four deployments to Afghanistan and earned four Bronze Stars — the fourth-highest military combat award, issued for heroic service against an armed enemy.

Waltz and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth were both entangled in the Signal chat that Waltz’s team created where members of the Trump administration discussed strike plans against the Houthis. 

Waltz in March said he took ‘full responsibility’ for the Signal group chat, and the Trump administration has maintained that no war plans were shared in the chat. The Atlantic published the full exchange of messages, which included certain attack details such as specific aircraft and times of the strikes from Hegseth. 

On May 1, President Donald Trump announced Waltz’s departure from his role as national security advisor and hours later unveiled the former Florida congressman’s nomination to represent the U.S. at the U.N. 

Democrats called for Hegseth’s resignation as a result of the chat and warned that Waltz would face the heat during the confirmation process for U.N. ambassador. 

Democratic Sen. Tammy Duckworth of Illinois said in a May interview with CBS News that Waltz could count on a ‘brutal, brutal hearing’ from senators, and described his nomination as ‘failing up.’ 

‘He’s not qualified for the job, just by nature of the fact that he participated in this Signal chain,’ Duckworth, a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, told CBS News. 

Duckworth, who served in the Illinois Army National Guard as a Blackhawk helicopter pilot and lost both of her legs during a 2004 deployment to Iraq, told Fox News Digital Monday that Waltz’s involvement in the group chat should disqualify him from serving as U.N. ambassador. She also said that every official included in the chat should be fired. 

‘As a retired Soldier, Waltz should have shut the unclassified chain down as soon as he saw Hegseth share such classified information that could’ve gotten our pilots killed,’ Duckworth said in a statement. ‘It’s clear Waltz cannot be trusted to make critical and sensitive national security decisions, and I look forward to pressing him on his conduct and holding him accountable.’

 

Duckworth has pinned most of the blame on Hegseth for Signalgate. Prior to Trump’s announcement on Waltz’s U.N. ambassador nomination, Duckworth said in a May post on X that of ‘all the idiots in that chat, Hegseth is the biggest security risk of all — he leaked the info that put our troops in greater danger.’ 

In addition to Waltz and Hegseth, administration officials including Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and CIA Director John Ratcliffe were part of the group chat. 

Additionally, ranking member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee Sen. Chris Coons, D-Conn., said that Waltz could brace for a meticulous confirmation hearing before the committee’s members. 

‘I look forward to a thorough confirmation hearing,’ Coons said in a post on X in May. 

A spokesperson for Coons did not respond to a request for comment from Fox News Digital. 

The GOP foreign relations source described the fallout from Signalgate a ‘huge nothing burger,’ and pointed out that Democrats’ previous efforts to use Signalgate against Waltz and Hegseth have proven unsuccessful. 

‘If this was their deathly bullet, it would have killed Hegseth, and it would have killed Waltz, but they’re both left standing,’ the source told Fox News Digital. 

A Senate aide told Fox News Digital that while Waltz took the brunt of the blame for Signalgate because his team created the chat, Democrats’ expected questioning of the group chat during the hearing is actually about finding a new avenue to go after Trump. 

‘I don’t think he’s the target. He’s just the mechanism to go after the target,’ the Senate aide said. ‘At the end of the day, Democrats want to criticize and go after the president, so these guys are just a mechanism to get there.’ 

Meanwhile, Republican lawmakers have voiced support for Waltz, with Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Sen. Jim Risch, R-Idaho, calling him a ‘great choice’ for the position in a post on X in May. Additionally, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said at the time that the Senate would ‘for sure’ confirm Waltz. 

‘Some things I know for sure: the sun rises in the East, sets in the West and Mike Waltz will be confirmed as the next UN Ambassador,’ Graham said in an X post in May. ‘He is highly qualified, well-positioned, and will be a strong voice for our nation at the UN.’

Since Waltz’s departure as serving as national security advisor, Rubio has stepped in to fill that role. 

Trump previously nominated Rep. Elise Stefanik, R-N.Y., to represent the U.S. at the U.N. However, her nomination was pulled in March, and Trump claimed at the time that the House could not give up another Republican seat with its slim 220–212 Republican majority. 

If confirmed as U.N. ambassador, Waltz would be responsible for representing U.S. interests at the U.N.’s New York headquarters, weighing in on resolutions, treaties and other global matters.  

Waltz could not be reached for comment by Fox News Digital. 

The 80th session of the U.N. General Assembly is scheduled for Sept. 9, providing a window of time for Waltz’s nomination to make it through the entire confirmation process beforehand. 

‘The hope is to have him in place before the U.N. General Assembly is in session,’ the GOP foreign relations source told Fox News Digital. 

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House Oversight Chairman James Comer, R-Ky., subpoenaed Anthony Bernal, who served as chief of staff for first lady Jill Biden and as an assistant to President Joe Biden, to testify at a deposition Wednesday.

Bernal refused to appear for a transcribed interview on June 26 as part of the Oversight Committee’s investigation into the alleged cover-up of Biden’s mental decline and potentially unauthorized use of autopen for pardons and other executive actions.

He had previously confirmed he would appear for the interview, but when the White House Counsel’s Office notified him it was waiving executive privilege, Bernal said he would no longer appear for the interview.

‘It’s abundantly clear that Anthony Bernal – Jill Biden’s so-called ‘work husband’ – never intended to be transparent about Joe Biden’s cognitive decline and the ensuing cover-up. With no privilege left to hide behind, Mr. Bernal is now running scared, desperate to bury the truth,’ Comer said. 

Two recent books about the Biden administration have painted an unflattering picture of Bernal’s political rise. 

By proxy, the first lady’s top aide became one of the most influential people in the White House, according to ‘Original Sin,’ a book by CNN anchor Jake Tapper and Axios political correspondent Alex Thompson. 

‘He would not be welcome at my funeral,’ a longtime Biden aide told the authors. 

Operating in a White House anchored in loyalty, Bernal wielded loyalty as a weapon to weed out the defectors, Tapper and Thompson said. 

And Bernal earned a reputation for trash-talking fellow aides, as ‘some even described him as the worst person they had ever met,’ Tapper and Thompson said. 

Jill Biden and Bernal worked in tandem, keeping score of ‘who was with them and against them,’ according to Tapper and Thompson. 

A former White House staffer fired back against Tapper and Thompson’s allegations about Bernal in a statement to Fox News Digital. 

‘A lot of vignettes in this book are either false, exaggerated, or purposefully omit viewpoints that don’t fit the narrative they want to push. Anthony was a strong leader with high standards and a mentor to many. He’s the type of person you want on a team – he’s incredibly strategic, effective, and cares deeply about the people he manages,’ the former White House staffer said in May. 

‘2024: How Trump Retook the White House and the Democrats Lost America,’ released last week by Josh Dawsey of The Wall Street Journal, Tyler Pager of The New York Times and Isaac Arnsdor of The Washington Post, outlines how Bernal’s political influence grew alongside Jill Biden. 

‘He quickly bonded with Jill Biden and never left her side, becoming unflinchingly loyal to her and using his proximity to her to exert power wherever he decided. It was often unclear if the opinion he was expressing was his own or the first lady’s. Sometimes, when donors or voters asked her questions, Bernal would jump in to answer,’ the authors said. 

Lindy Li, a former DNC fundraiser and Democratic insider who had a front-row seat to Biden’s presidency, told Fox News Digital, ‘People like Anthony Bernal. I saw him running the White House like he was in charge, like he was a king. It’s just so amazing now to see him dodge a subpoena and completely dodge accountability. He can run, but he can’t hide. His name is going to go down in infamy forever.’

Li said Bernal ‘followed Jill around like a dog.’ However, Li clarified that he ran the East Wing more than the West Wing. She said Bernal was among those running the White House during Biden’s presidency.

Democratic strategist Michael LaRosa, who served as press secretary to Jill Biden, told Fox News Digital that, ‘No one spent more time, whether it was in the motorcade, on the plane, in the private residence at the White House, Camp David, and at both houses in Delaware, nobody spent more personal time around them and their family and the Biden family than Anthony.’

Bernal and a Biden spokesperson did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment on this article. 

Fox News Digital’s Andrew Mark Miller contributed to this report. 

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Senate Republicans are gearing up to advance a multibillion-dollar clawback package from President Donald Trump, but dissent among the ranks threatens to stymie the process.

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., intends to put Trump’s $9.4 billion rescissions package, which would scrape back congressionally approved funding for a variety of so-called ‘woke’ programs that fund foreign aid and public broadcasting.

However, a handful of Senate Republicans have raised a fuss over $8.3 billion in cuts from the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), and over $1 billion from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB), the government-backed funding arm for NPR and PBS.

The bill is expected to have its first test vote on Tuesday, but questions remain about whether Thune has the votes.

Senate Republicans are set to meet with Office of Management and Budget Director Russ Vought, who became a near-constant presence on the Hill during the budget reconciliation process, in a bid to shore up support among concerned lawmakers.

Publicly, Sens. Susan Collins, R-Maine and Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, have expressed reservations about the package, particularly over proposed cuts to the Bush-era President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) and the public broadcasting fund.

Collins said she still had concerns about the bill, and was coy about whether she would support its advancement — when asked if she’d vote to move it along, she smiled as the Senate elevator door shut. 

Sen. Mike Rounds, R-S.D., was similarly concerned about the bill because of slashes to public broadcasting that could have negative effects on tribal radio stations in rural areas, but he moved to back the bill after getting guarantees that roughly $10 million in Green New Deal money could be shifted to help pay for grants to keep the stations afloat. 

However, he was unsure if there was enough support to move the bill through its first test. 

‘I don’t have a head count on it, but my concerns have been taken care of,’ he said. 

And there are more lawmakers who have privately expressed their hangups about the bill. Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., said that there were ‘several members’ who have raised issue with the package, and he too would like more information on the inner workings of the spending cuts. 

‘It’s important that we succeed on this package, because I hope this is just a warm-up for what should be tens of billions of dollars worth of rescission,’ he said. 

Thune can only afford to lose three votes and will receive no help from Senate Democrats in another hyper-partisan process.

An amendment process coming in the form of another vote-a-rama is expected, but changing the bill could have consequences in the House, where Republicans are warning their colleagues in the upper chamber to stomach the clawbacks as proposed by the White House.

Thune said he and his leadership team have been discussing issues with the package and trying to make possible changes to the legislation before it hits the floor.

‘I’m fine with it as is, but I think we have colleagues who would like to see some perhaps modest changes made, so we’re trying to find out if there’s a path forward that gets us 51 and stays consistent,’ he told reporters.

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Via IBN IBN a multifaceted communications organization engaged in connecting public companies to the investment community, is pleased to announce the release of the latest episode of The MiningNewsWire Podcast as part of its sustained effort to provide specialized content distribution via widespread syndication channels.

 

The MiningNewsWire Podcast features revealing sit-downs with executives who are shaping the future of the global mining industry. The latest episode features Kimberly Ann, Founder, CEO, President & Executive Chair of Lahontan Gold Corp. (TSX.V: LG) (OTCQB: LGCXF) , a Canadian mine development and exploration company advancing a portfolio of gold and silver assets in Nevada’s Walker Lane, one of the world’s most productive and mining-friendly regions.

 

To begin the interview, Ann outlined Lahontan Gold’s mission and strategic approach in Nevada’s Walker Lane.

 

‘At Lahontan Gold, we’re doing something so special,’ she said. ‘I have a very extensive background in running successful businesses across the board, and this one is just a perfect storm of great assets, the best jurisdiction in the world, and the best timing with our new administration that’s so pro-mining. Gold is finally on the critical metals list, and we have a past producer — perfect asset — that I’m so excited to tell everybody about.’

 

Ann went on to describe the Santa Fe Mine’s history and potential.

 

‘The Santa Fe mine was a past producer from 1988 to 1994, open-pit style heap leach. It’s the lowest cost style of operation you can have. It shut down from pure economics, because gold was at $340. They left a lot of gold and silver in the ground,’ she explained. ‘Right now, we have 2 million ounces that we’re reporting to the world. We obviously have a lot more internally that we’re working on, but really, it’s a very simple story in that we have enough to have a mine again now, and we’re fast-tracking it.’

 

She also emphasized her business-first mindset and the importance of focusing on outcomes.

 

‘I’m not emotional about it. I’m not in love with the project. I’m not thinking of anything but making money and making the company successful,’ she added. ‘I have a unique perspective in that, yes, I understand the geology. Yes, I understand the engineering background. But, more importantly, I understand the business and how to get to the finish line.’

 

Join IBN’s Stuart Smith and Kimberly Ann, Founder, CEO, President & Executive Chair of Lahontan Gold , for a discussion on unlocking the potential of past-producing mines, leveraging Nevada’s mining advantages, and driving shareholder-focused growth.

 

To hear the whole podcast and subscribe for future episodes, visit https://podcast.miningnewswire.com  

 

The latest installment of The MiningNewsWire Podcast continues to reinforce IBN’s commitment to the expansion of its robust network of brands, client partners, followers and the growing IBN Podcast Series . For more than 19 years, IBN has leveraged this commitment to provide unparalleled distribution and corporate messaging solutions to 500+ public and private companies .

 

To learn more about IBN’s achievements and milestones via a visual timeline, visit:   https://IBN.fm/TimeLine   

 

  About Lahontan Gold Corp.  

 

 Lahontan Gold Corp. is a Canadian mine development and mineral exploration company that holds, through its U.S. subsidiaries, four top-tier gold and silver exploration properties in the Walker Lane of mining-friendly Nevada. Lahontan’s flagship property, the 26.4 km 2 Santa Fe Mine project, had past production of 359,202 ounces of gold and 702,067 ounces of silver between 1988 and 1994 from open pit mines utilizing heap-leach processing. The Santa Fe Mine has a Canadian National Instrument 43-101 compliant Indicated Mineral Resource of 1,539,000 oz AuEq (48,393,000 tonnes grading 0.92 g/t Au and 7.18 g/t Ag, together grading 0.99 g/t AuEq) and an Inferred Mineral Resource of 411,000 oz AuEq (16,760,000 grading 0.74 g/t Au and 3.25 g/t Ag, together grading 0.76 g/t AuEq), all pit constrained ( AuEq is inclusive of recovery, please see Santa Fe Project Technical Report and note below* ).

 

The company plans to continue advancing the Santa Fe Mine project toward production, update the Santa Fe Preliminary Economic Assessment, and drill test its satellite West Santa Fe project during 2025.

 

For more information, visit the company’s website at www.LahontanGoldCorp.com  

 

  The technical content of this news release and the company’s technical disclosure has been reviewed and approved by Michael Lindholm, CPG, Independent Consulting Geologist to Lahontan Gold Corp., who is a Qualified Person as defined in National Instrument 43-101 — Standards of Disclosure for Mineral Projects. Mr. Lindholm was not an author for the Technical Report* and does not take responsibility for the resource calculation but can confirm that the grade and ounces in this press release are the same as those given in the Technical Report.  

 

  * Please see the ‘Preliminary Economic Assessment, NI 43-101 Technical Report, Santa Fe Project’, Authors: Kenji Umeno, P. Eng., Thomas Dyer, PE, Kyle Murphy, PE, Trevor Rabb, P. Geo, Darcy Baker, PhD, P. Geo., and John M. Young, SME-RM; Effective Date: December 10, 2024, Report Date: January 24, 2025. The Technical Report is available on the company’s website and SEDAR+. Mineral resources are reported using a cut-off grade of 0.15 g/t AuEq for oxide resources and 0.60 g/t AuEq for non-oxide resources. AuEq for the purpose of cut-off grade and reporting the Mineral Resources is based on the following assumptions gold price of US$1,950/oz gold, silver price of US$23.50/oz silver, and oxide gold recoveries ranging from 28% to 79%, oxide silver recoveries ranging from 8% to 30%, and non-oxide gold and silver recoveries of 71%.  

 

  About IBN  

 

  IBN consists of financial brands introduced to the investment public over the course of 19+ years. With IBN, we have amassed a collective audience of millions of social media followers. These distinctive investor brands aim to fulfill the unique needs of a growing base of client-partners. IBN will continue to expand our branded network of highly influential properties, leveraging the knowledge and energy of specialized teams of experts to serve our increasingly diversified list of clients.

 

Through our Dynamic Brand Portfolio (DBP) , IBN provides: (1) access to a network of wire solutions via InvestorWire to reach all target markets, industries and demographics in the most effective manner possible; (2) article and editorial syndication to 5,000+ news outlets ; (3) Press Release Enhancement to ensure maximum impact; (4) full-scale distribution to a growing social media audience; (5) a full array of corporate communications solutions ; and (6) total news coverage solutions.

 

For more information, please visit https://www.InvestorBrandNetwork.com  

 

Please see full terms of use and disclaimers on the InvestorBrandNetwork website applicable to all content provided by IBN, wherever published or re-published: http://IBN.fm/Disclaimer  

 

  Forward-Looking Statements  

 

This release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. All forward-looking statements are inherently uncertain as they are based on current expectations and assumptions concerning future events or future performance of the company. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which are only predictions and speak only as of the date hereof. In evaluating such statements, prospective investors should review carefully various risks and uncertainties identified in this release and matters set in the company’s SEC filings. These risks and uncertainties could cause the company’s actual results to differ materially from those indicated in the forward-looking statements.

 

  Corporate Communications  

 

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