Firestone increases guidance as Liqhobong throughput rises

22nd June 2017 By: Megan van Wyngaardt - Creamer Media Contributing Editor Online

JOHANNESBURG (miningweekly.com) – Firestone Diamonds now expects to recover around 360 000 ct of diamonds in the financial year ending June 30, against April’s guidance of 300 000 ct, owing to operational ramp-up at its Liqhobong mine, in Lesotho, achieving nameplate throughput capacity on multiple occasions since the start of operations.

The Aim-listed diamond miner has also started quarterly repayments under the terms of its $82.4-million Absa debt facility and made its first capital repayment of $1.4-million in March.

The current $15-million standby facility provided by Resource Capital Fund (RCF) expires on June 30 and, while the company has sufficient financial headroom to continue operations and meet its debt repayment obligations as they fall due, the directors have decided to extend the standby facility to provide the company with a prudent level of financial and operational flexibility.

Accordingly, Firestone and RCF have agreed to extend the standby facility for a further year to June 30, 2018, subject to the company drawing $5-million on signature of the amendments to the standby facility.

As a result, Firestone has submitted a drawdown request to RCF for $5-million under the standby facility and, at June 21, the company would have had cash on hand of $13.1-million.

The balance of $10-million remaining under the standby facility will give the company the ability to maintain a prudent working capital buffer and the flexibility to continue to optimise mining operations as it sees fit.