Video: John Kaiser proposes a new system for financing junior miners

ceo-caPOSTED ON FEBRUARY 19, 2015 BY TOMMY HUMPHREYS
CATEGORY FEATURED INTERVIEWJOHN KAISERMINERAL EXPLORATION

In the good old days of Howe Street, venture stock-brokers would act as an intermediary between junior mining companies and investors. This is a somewhat murky ethical practice of the brokers having two masters, both the companies they were helping to get off the ground, and the clients with which they were to serve. Investors tolerated this conflict of interest because they knew what they were getting into, and sometimes, they made a lot of money backing early stage deals.

However, in recent years, large banks have consolidated the brokerage business, now controlling 95% of Canada’s wealth, according to some estimates. The banks do not want their brokers and clients to play in speculative securities like junior miners because of the risks and perceived conflicts of interest. Also, the big banks want to earn a management fee on assets over the long term. Short term transactional business, while excellent in boom years, is not a consistent business model for them.

These are not the only challenges facing the capital formation process for junior miners, according to veteran TSXV analyst John Kaiser. High frequency trading, discount brokerages, and declining commodity prices have all but killed the after-market for shares in junior miners. The result is a system that is collapsing on itself.

Kaiser believes the easiest way to bolster the sector, which exists to provide capital to find and develop new mines, is to abolish Accredited Investor Exemption rules that currently restrict non-rich people from giving money directly to the treasuries of these companies. Currently, only Accredited Investors, or those making over $200,000 annually or with more than $1,000,000 in liquid assets, are able to give money directly to companies in exchange for shares, while those earning less than those thresholds are restricted to buying shares in the open market. This is a bit of an oversimplification, and there are some exceptions to this.

“Net worth does not imply sophistication,” Kaiser has said, and he believes that eliminating these restrictions will open up an enormous new audience of investors to the sector, which could help get discoveries and development going again, even in a declining commodity price environment.

The existing regulatory and disclosure practices of Canada’s junior public companies should be leveraged into a new financing system for junior miners, Kaiser believes. He envisions a web-based system whereby regular, non-Accredited investors with accounts that are 100% their responsibility, with no compensated intermediary, should be able to invest directly in early stage companies. He went as far as to propose a 48 hour “Buyers Remorse” window so investors can back-out of their purchases, in case they drank too much wine or were charmed by promoters into investing in something they’re not comfortable with.

“When it closes, the money gets swept to the company, and the certs and warrants get swept into the clients accounts, and a processing fee, maybe .2% or .4% gets charged, rather than the 8%-12% that the conflict of interest soaked trusted intermediaries have been socking the companies with in the private placement mechanism.”

Kaiser believes the venture brokerage industry is history.

“The roles that they used to play are no longer viable.”

We discussed this in chat.ceo.ca yesterday and a smart aspiring broker, Riley Skinner, provided a quality rebuttal to Kaiser.

“The real money is made on finding good positions for your clients and taking positions with them, maybe even being a part of putting the deals together. It’s much more entrepreneurial than the Wealth Management model. Creation, not extraction. – speaking from no experience.”

Riley continued, “Not to mention the fact that only a few places “specialize” in it anymore. The margins may be slimmer, but the pie is much greater.”

Kaiser was not all doom and gloom during our interview, noting that the degree of professionalism that has entered the mining sector has never been stronger and will not go away.

He made the case for speculative investors to begin paying attention to mining explorers and developers because of the finitude of the upside potential.

“You can quantify the success potential of an exploration play much more effectively than you can some new medical device or new mobile app,” Kaiser said. “These things are all benefiting from the giant momentum that’s on the upside, this momentum is peaking right now, this will all be descending into the garbage can over the next five years. During this period, people who want to make high risk, high reward bets should be looking at the resource sector.”

“If you want to gamble in juniors, you need ten different stocks to diversify that risk. If you think you can pick the one stock that’s going to be a home run, I guarantee you will lose.”

“I agree there’s been a lot of mismanagement, but there’s also been excellent management, and we’re now seeing a winnowing from the wheat from the chaff.”

“When the tide rises, most of the boats are going to be tethered to the dock and are just going to hang there and go nowhere.”

It has been a privilege to get to know John through time spent together at Cambridge House conferences, and as a subscriber to his newsletter ($250/90 days here). Consider a subscription as there is no equivalent junior mining research tool.

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