We may only be an $8M company, but we're punching well above our weight.
Large land position, multiple discoveries, and a location next door to Mt Lyell, one of Australiaโs most important historic mines.
Tiny market cap. Serious geological footprint.
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Someone's been exploring on our ground, and the footage is something else.
Independent creator Rob Parsons gives you an unfiltered look at what it's actually like to explore n Tasmania.
If you want to see what prospective ground looks like ๐ https://t.co/kozKple1sO
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What are we, really?
CopperCorp is a rare chance to get into an underexplored copper belt in a top jurisdiction, backed by a local team and positioned in a market where new copper discoveries are getting harder to make.
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At Jukes, the picture improves as we learn more.
Mineralization is more continuous to the south-west, where we're looking for longer intersections and higher grades.
This growing confidence is why stepping out to the south-west is now a high priority.
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How do you raise capital as a microcap without diluting the company into dust?
You try very hard, you get creative, and you donโt assume the market owes you anything.
Yes, there are options besides the classic raise below-market equity with penny flippers and warrant clippers.
You can option or JV non-core ground, sell a royalty, do a strategic placement, bring in an offtake partner, sell a piece of a project, farm out exploration, structure milestone-based deals that fund work without hammering the share count on day one, etc, etc.
Sometimes you can stage financings around catalysts to raise smaller amounts at higher prices.
Sometimes you can tighten terms in a good tape and avoid warrants.
Sometimes you can build enough credibility that real money shows up with less predatory structure.
But none of this is guaranteed.
These are tools, not entitlements, and most microcaps donโt have access to the good versions of them by default.
Which is why, in the end, you fall back to whether or not you trust the management team, and whether they've done it/creative things before.
Boring, but true; you still have to dig deeper and ask more questions.
I did, in my recent interview with @copper_corp $CPER.V $CPCPF
The CEOs answer is in the clip below.
The full interview is on YT now.
Australia has a lot of copper, but much of it is too deep to mine easily. That leaves few real copper exposure plays in ๐ฆ๐บ.
We've hit mineralisation in every hole at Jukes, yet we're sitting at just $8M MCAP.
In a copper-hungry market, that makes $CPER.V $CPCPF one to watch.
How Big Does a Copper Project in Tasmania Have to be to Matter?
CEO Stephen Swatton joins @ResourceTalks for an in-depth interview.
Watch it here ๐ https://t.co/uIKl78S0PR
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โ ๏ธ NEWS RELEASE
We see district-scale potential with multiple target areas identified along-trend and within a 10-20 km radius of Alpine Stellar Zone, and field exploration programs in progress.
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โ ๏ธ NEWS RELEASE
We see district-scale potential with multiple target areas identified along-trend and within a 10-20 km radius of Alpine Stellar Zone, and field exploration programs in progress.
๐จ๐ฆ $CPER.V ๐บ๐ธ $CPCPF
Copper has become strategic and the hunt is changing
A senior BHP exec told our CEO at PDAC that majors are tempering expectations on size/location, which makes 'overlooked' places like Tasmania a lot more important.
Thatโs why we keep pushing for growth.
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Mining matters in Tasmania. A lot.
The political support is broad, the process is practical, and things actually move.
Drill permits can land in ~2 weeks, and the govt can co-fund up to 50% of drilling costs, which can mean less dilution for shareholders.
๐จ๐ฆ $CPER.V ๐บ๐ธ $CPCPF
Mining matters in Tasmania. A lot.
The political support is broad, the process is practical, and things actually move.
Drill permits can land in ~2 weeks, and the govt can co-fund up to 50% of drilling costs, which can mean less dilution for shareholders.
๐จ๐ฆ $CPER.V ๐บ๐ธ $CPCPF
Mining in Tasmania is Making a Comeback (This is Why)
CEO Stephen Swatton explains why that matters for us.
Watch it here ๐ https://t.co/hMrbFDt5D9
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CopperCorp Delivers Additional High-Grade Copper Intercepts at Jukes, including 13m @ 2.01% CuEq
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Phase 1 and Phase 2 drilling have both confirmed that high grade copperโgold-silver mineralization remains open both along-strike and at depth.
Whatโs the goal for CopperCorp right now?
Simple: turn mineralization into a resource.
Weโre drilling close enough to support an inferred resource, and weโre seeing up to 2% Cu.
๐จ๐ฆ $CPER.V ๐บ๐ธ $CPCPF
CopperCorp Delivers Additional High-Grade Copper Intercepts at Jukes, including 13m @ 2.01% CuEq
๐จ๐ฆ $CPER.V ๐บ๐ธ $CPCPF
Phase 1 and Phase 2 drilling have both confirmed that high grade copperโgold-silver mineralization remains open both along-strike and at depth.
Good to see the drill spinning and the program advancing at our Jukes Copper-Gold prospect on the Razorback Property in Western Tasmania, ๐ฆ๐บ.
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CopperCorp: Exploring a Major Copper Belt in Tasmania
Stephen Swatton joins us from PDAC to discuss drilling near the historic Mt Lyell mine, high-grade copper-gold targets, and the path toward a potential first resource at Jukes.
Watch Here๐
https://t.co/RI6XrSdbTb
@copper_corp | $CPER.V | #coi