National Post

Canadian mining magnates battle for junior Coastal Gold

- By Peter Koven Financial Post pkoven@nationalpo­st.com

• Two Canadian mining magnates are fighting an increasing­ly heated battle for a tiny junior company, with one accusing the other of “incestuous behaviour” within his empire.

Keith Neumeyer’s First Mining Finance Corp. has offered six cents a share (or about $10.2 million) for Coastal Gold Corp., which has a project in Newfoundla­nd. The rival offer for Toronto-based Coastal, from Stan Bharti’s Sulliden Mining Capital Inc., is worth about 2.3 cents.

Given that the offer from Vancouver-based First Mining is more than double Sulliden’s offer, one might as- sume that Neumeyer is convinced he will win. But that isn’t the case. Coastal’s board is currently endorsing the Sulliden bid, and Neumeyer would be surprised if that changes.

“It’s a joke,” he said in an interview. “They are obviously not acting in the best interests of shareholde­rs and exercising their fiduciary duties. ”

Neumeyer, who previously founded First Quantum Minerals Ltd. and First Majestic Silver Corp., thinks the problem here is inter-relationsh­ips between Bharti’s companies. Both Sulliden and Coastal are under the umbrella of Forbes & Manhattan (F&M), Bharti’s conglomera­te of resource companies.

“There’s incestuous behaviour between all three groups,” he said.

Neumeyer pointed out that every director of Coastal has ties to F&M, as does its chief financial officer and corporate secretary. Some of them even work out of F&M offices and have F&M on their business cards, he claimed.

He believes Bharti and his people are determined to put Coastal and Sulliden together, even if it means rejecting a much higher bid. He noted that Coastal has a good project, but needs cash, while Sulliden has cash.

The clock is ticking for Neumeyer, as shareholde­rs are scheduled to vote on the Coastal-Sulliden deal on Wednesday. He wants an Ontario court to delay that meeting, and said the Ontario Securities Commission has been alerted to the situation. He thinks shareholde­rs need a better opportunit­y to look at his bid.

Bharti, a famous junior mining financier, has come under fire several times in the last few years from shareholde­rs who claimed he is not acting in their interests. He has been targeted in multiple proxy fights.

He has also had plenty of successes. He helped create Consolidat­ed Thompson Iron Mines Ltd. (which sold for $4.9 billion) and Avion Gold Corp. (which sold for nearly $400 million).

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