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Barrick Mining (TSX:ABX,NYSE:B) has closed the sale of its Hemlo gold mine in northern Ontario to Carcetti Capital (TSXV:CART.H), completing a transition the company first announced in September and marking one of its most significant portfolio shifts this year.

In a statement Wednesday (November 26), Barrick said the finalized divestiture is worth up to US$1.09 billion. The company received US$875 million in cash and US$50 million in Hemlo Mining shares at closing, with up to US$165 million in additional payments tied to gold prices and production beginning in 2027.

Barrick also formally thanked the Biigtigong Nishnaabeg and Netmizaaggamig Nishnaabeg First Nations, noting their cooperation and support throughout Hemlo’s operation.

The transaction continues the company’s effort to streamline its holdings and redirect capital to what it calls Tier One assets.

Hemlo Mining, the renamed acquirer, gains control of one of Canada’s longstanding gold operations. For Barrick, the exit removes a non-core asset as it concentrates on its global gold and copper portfolio, which spans 18 countries and includes six Tier One gold mines.

As Barrick exits Hemlo, Wheaton Precious Metals (TSX:WPM,NYSE:WPM) also confirmed it has closed its previously announced gold stream with Carcetti, providing US$300 million in upfront funding.

The stream forms the cornerstone of a financing structure that includes US$542 million in equity proceeds, with Wheaton contributing about US$30 million, as well as up to US$250 million in bank debt. Wheaton originally committed up to US$400 million for the stream, but Hemlo Mining elected to draw US$300 million under the agreed terms.

The completion of the stream delivers immediate production and cash flow to Wheaton while giving Hemlo Mining the liquidity needed to finalize the acquisition and pursue operational improvements at the site.

The company said the gold stream is “a key component” of the mine’s recapitalization and transition under new ownership.

The close of the Hemlo sale comes just days after the company resolved a major standoff in West Africa.

On Monday (November 24), Barrick confirmed it had struck a deal with the Malian government that will return full operational control of the Loulo-Gounkoto complex to the company, ending months of tension that escalated into arbitration at the World Bank’s dispute-resolution center.

People familiar with the matter said that the agreement includes a settlement worth 244 billion CFA francs (US$430 million). According to those sources, Barrick will pay 144 billion CFA francs within six days of signing, with another 50 billion CFA francs covered through VAT-credit offsets.

An additional 50 billion CFA francs had already been paid last year. Barrick declined to say whether the final agreement formally includes these settlement terms.

In exchange, Mali will drop its charges against Barrick, relinquish state control over Loulo-Gounkoto, release four detained employees, and renew the company’s Loulo mining permit for another decade.

The settlement also requires Barrick to comply with Mali’s 2023 mining code, the very issue that triggered the dispute. The company will also now withdraw its arbitration claim.

Securities Disclosure: I, Giann Liguid, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

This post appeared first on investingnews.com

Canada and Alberta have sealed a wide-ranging deal that links deep emissions cuts with a long-term push to grow oil and gas output through new export pipelines and fast-track clean energy infrastructure.

Prime Minister Mark Carney and Alberta Premier Danielle Smith signed the memorandum of understanding in Calgary on Thursday (November 27). The MOU outlines a package led by Pathways Plus—described as the world’s largest carbon capture, utilization and storage project.

Under the pact, Canada also commits to suspend its Clean Electricity Regulations in Alberta and to refrain from implementing the long-discussed federal emissions cap for oil and gas.

In turn, Alberta agreed to advance a privately financed pipeline capable of transporting at least one million barrels per day of low-emissions bitumen to Asian markets, with Indigenous co-ownership built into the project’s structure.

The MOU states the application for the pipeline must be ready by July 1, 2026. In turn, the federal government will treat it as a project of national interest under the Building Canada Act.

Carney framed the deal as a response to global instability and a pivot toward a more self-reliant economic foundation.

“In the face of global trade shifts and profound uncertainty, Canada and Alberta are striking a new partnership to build a stronger, more sustainable, and more independent Albertan and Canadian economy,” he said in a statement. “We will make Canada an energy superpower, drive down our emissions and diversify our export markets.”

Beyond oil, the arrangement includes extensive commitments to expand nuclear power, strengthen Alberta’s electricity grid, and support thousands of megawatts of new AI-oriented computing capacity, including sovereign cloud infrastructure for Canada and its allies.

Alberta will also pursue major transmission interties with British Columbia and Saskatchewan to move low-carbon electricity across provincial borders, a step both governments say is essential for decarbonizing energy-intensive industries.

The MOU also sets a course for a new industrial carbon pricing agreement, with Alberta’s TIER regime remaining the backbone of provincial regulation. Both governments agreed to a minimum effective credit price of US$130 per metric ton alongside a methane-reduction target of 75 percent by 2035.

“Canada is acting decisively to establish ourselves as a global energy superpower in the face of a changing world,” added Tim Hodgson, Canada’s Minister of Energy and Natural Resources.

“Together, Canada and Alberta will not only export critical energy to our customers, we will also support our allies, create hundreds of thousands of jobs here at home, and show that our energy sector can lead on a global stage.”

A joint implementation committee is slated to finalize these frameworks by April 1, 2026.

Securities Disclosure: I, Giann Liguid, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

This post appeared first on investingnews.com

Canada’s 2025 federal budget arrives at a pivotal moment for the country’s economic trajectory. Facing a decades-long productivity challenge, the government aims to reinvigorate growth through carefully targeted investment incentives and strategic reforms.

Rather than broad fiscal stimulus, the budget focuses on fostering innovation, modernizing tax credits like the Scientific Research and Experimental Development (SRED) program and encouraging private sector investment in new technologies.

This approach aims to break Canada’s productivity stagnation and position the economy for long-term competitiveness.

Canada’s productivity dilemma

In a speech at the Association des économistes québécois (ASDEQ) and CFA Québec on November 19, Bank of Canada (BoC) deputy governor Nicolas Vincent declared that Canada is facing a “systemic problem” when it comes to productivity.

“To put it bluntly, we’re stuck in a vicious circle,” Vincent said. “There is no quick or easy way to improve productivity, and no single sector can do it alone.

“If we want to fix this, we’ll need to be thoughtful, systematic and resolute,” he added, suggesting that policymakers should focus on improving the country’s investment climate, increasing competition and developing talent.

Vincent’s comments echoed an earlier opinion shared by BoC Governor Tiff Macklem, who, following the bank’s most recent cut to its benchmark lending rate last month, warned that Canadians could face a lower standard of living unless governments and businesses can find ways to improve productivity.

Macklem added that the recent federal budget could enhance the country’s productivity, “but it’s going to come down to execution.”

Building on these concerns, Polson explained that for Canada to move beyond incremental progress and truly improve productivity and competitiveness, the country must tackle long-standing hurdles. “We’re looking for a reduction in interprovincial trade barriers… It’s becoming increasingly necessary…that we have to act cohesively there.”

Historically low and rapidly declining R&D investment was another factor negatively impacting Canadian productivity, identified in a report from the Council of Canadian Academies. The authors suggest that addressing this requires more than just a single policy or tax incentive.

Polson also highlighted the need to move beyond incremental measures and focus on disciplined, systematic changes that foster efficient capital allocation and strengthen the foundations of business decision-making.

From his vantage point, the modernization and expansion of the SR&ED tax credit program can be a nudge in the right direction. “(This country has) blessings in terms of resources, in terms of outstanding universities…there is all kinds of great knowledge and innovation happening here, but no commercialization. People go elsewhere for it.

“The SR&ED credit is going to do exactly the right thing. It’s going to keep (innovation) here. It’s going to hit one of those other really big issues for our economy, which is we need better-paying blue-collar jobs. It’s (also) going to spur entrepreneurship and help us capture a bigger portion of the innovation that happens here.”

To build on that, Polson described the transformation of Canadian jobs driven by technology. “I would almost call it sky blue collar, a beautiful mix of part white, part blue (collar jobs),” he said to categorize emerging roles that combine the technical skills of traditional blue-collar work with the knowledge and productivity advances typically associated with white-collar jobs.

The budget’s approach to productivity and growth

Hanson, a CPA and 20-year SR&ED expert, explained the changes to the SR&ED tax credit program, which include increasing the enhanced 35 percent credit’s expenditure limit to C$6 million. The budget also raises the phase-out thresholds more broadly, allowing more businesses, especially SMEs, to benefit from the credit.

“They’ve also opened it up to public companies,” he added.“Now this is a really big one. You’re going to see public companies that are not profitable now applying, as well as more companies actually looking to the public market in order to raise funds, because they weren’t previously able to do so without losing the benefits of the program,” he explained.

By expanding the eligibility and scale of the credit, Hanson sees the government intending to incentivize greater R&D spending. “I think that being able to raise these limits is very significant, and I think that the government kind of knows this.”

In addition to SR&ED reforms, the budget introduces accelerated Capital Cost Allowances (CCA) for technology asset investment. This enhanced CCA allows faster deduction of eligible capital costs, targeting sectors like clean energy, advanced manufacturing and digital infrastructure to boost productivity.

“A big part of manufacturing was the capital assets being able to claim those … now that that’s actually back in the program, we’re actually going to see a huge bump in manufacturing companies,” he said.

Fiscal challenges and transparency concerns

Despite comprehensive measures, the budget has gaps. The Parliamentary Budget Officer (PBO) flagged concerns about fiscal transparency and the government’s optimistic capital investment classifications.

The PBO estimates that actual productive capital investments from 2024-25 to 2029-30 total approximately C$217 billion, about C$94 billion less than the budget’s reported figures.

This discrepancy arises because the government’s broadened definition of capital investments includes expenditures that, under international standards such as the System of National Accounts, would typically be classified as operating spending rather than capital formation.

The report advised the government to establish an independent expert body to define federal capital investments, in order to improve transparency and fiscal discipline.

Researchers for the PBO forecast the government will likely miss its Budget 2025 fiscal anchors: balancing operating spending by 2028-29 and maintaining a declining deficit-to-GDP ratio. Stress testing showed only a 7.5 percent chance that the deficit-to-GDP ratio will fall annually between 2026-27 and 2029-30.

New spending and higher program costs mean the operating balance is projected to remain in deficit through 2029-30. The PBO warned the government now has limited fiscal room for tax cuts or increased spending if it aims to stabilize the long-term debt-to-GDP ratio.

The office added that a lack of clarity on how incentives will spur business activity, as well as heavy reliance on complex tax credit compliance, may hinder smaller innovators.

Ensuring delivery

The budget’s success ultimately rests on ensuring its incentives are not undermined by complex compliance or slow processing.

“Because of the changes, we are going to see a lot more filers as a result. The time to process these claims (is) simply going to take longer,” said Hanson, adding that companies will need to factor wait times into their budgeting.

Additionally, Hanson described a current government consultation aimed at introducing “upfront technical approval” for certain classes of companies seeking SR&ED claims. “I would like to see them move forward with that. I think that is a great idea, and I think that will provide a lot more certainty for larger (and) smaller companies.”

For Canadian businesses, the 2025 Budget is a promise; its value now depends entirely on delivery.

Securities Disclosure: I, Meagen Seatter, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

This post appeared first on investingnews.com

(TheNewswire)

Charbone Hydrogen Corporation

Brossard (Québec), le 28 novembre 2025 TheNewswire – CORPORATION CHARBONE (TSXV: CH,OTC:CHHYF; OTCQB: CHHYF; FSE: K47) (« CHARBONE » ou la « Société »), un producteur et distributeur nord-américain spécialisé dans l’hydrogène propre Ultra Haute Pureté (« UHP ») et les gaz industriels stratégiques annonce aujourd’hui ses résultats financiers et opérationnels pour les périodes de trois et neuf mois se terminant le 30 septembre 2025.

La construction de la phase 1A de l’usine de Sorel-Tracy est terminée. Toutes les composantes sont installées et connectées sur le site, et les essais de mise en service sont en cours. Le projet reste sur la bonne voie pour démarrer la production de la première molécule d’hydrogène dans les prochains jours.

FAITS SAILLANTS T3 2025:

  • La perte d’exploitation nette a diminué de 17 % pour atteindre 577 159 $ au cours de la p ériode de 3 mois se terminant le 30 septembre 2025, contre 697 894 $ au deuxième trimestre 2024 (activités toujours en resserrement des frais généraux et administratifs).

  • Reconnaissance de revenus suite à l’avancement des activités de l’entente-cadre de collaboration visant à soutenir le déploiement d’un projet de développement d’hydrogène vert en Malaisie annoncé au deuxième trimestre 2025.

  • Le 30 septembre 2025, la Société a émis de nouvelles débentures convertibles garanties en remplacement des précédentes, pour un montant supplémentaire de 303 634 $, portant le total à 2 050 000 $. Ces nouvelles débentures portent intérêt mensuellement au taux annuel de 12 %, sont convertibles à 0,07 $ par action et arrivent à échéance dans un an.

  • La Société a clôturé un placement privé de 1 012 980 $ (551 000 $ en octobre 2025), des unités en règlement de dettes de 1 776 827 $ (503 125 $ en octobre 2025), des actions en règlement de dettes au management de 310 000 $ et des exercices de bons de souscription totalisant 657 672 $ (452 345 $ en T3 2024).

  • À la suite de la signature d’une convention d’achat d’actifs avec Harnois Énergies Inc., CHARBONE a finalisé l’acquisition et la réinstallation, à son site de Sorel-Tracy, des équipements opérationnels de production et de ravitaillement d’hydrogène. Le 6 octobre 2025, la Société a émis 13 333 334 actions ordinaires au prix de 0,075 $ l’action, représentant un versement de 1 million de dollars à Harnois Énergies Inc. dans le cadre du paiement de cette acquisition.

  • La Société a annoncé avoir signé une entente d’approvisionnement avec un producteur américain de gaz industriels de premier plan afin d’élargir son offre aux clients et a effectué sa première livraison d’hélium en octobre 2025, marquant le début de sa génération de revenus grâce à la distribution de gaz industriels.

La gestion financière rigoureuse de Charbone et ses nouveaux partenariats stratégiques lui permettent de concrétiser sa vision : devenir un leader nord-américain des réseaux de distribution d’hydrogène propre UHP et de gaz industriels. Ces avancées soulignent sa volonté de jouer un rôle moteur dans la transition énergétique.

L a direction est déterminée à poursuivre ses efforts pour structurer des ententes visant à financer de nouveaux investissements et l’expansion des projets , a déclaré Benoit Veilleux, Chef de la direction financière et secrétaire corporatif de Charbone. Charbone passe en mode exécution pour libérer son fort potentiel de croissance .


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À propos de CORPORATION CHARBONE

CHARBONE est un développeur et producteur d’hydrogène propre Ultra Haute Pureté (UHP) doté d’une plateforme de distribution de gaz industriels en pleine expansion. Grâce à une approche modulaire, CHARBONE se concentre sur le développement d’un réseau d’usines de production d’hydrogène propre en Amérique du Nord et sur certains marchés à l’étranger, en commençant par son projet phare de Sorel-Tracy au Québec. Le modèle intégré de l’entreprise réduit les risques, améliore l’évolutivité et permet de diversifier ses sources de revenus grâce à des partenariats dans le domaine de l’hélium et d’autres gaz de spécialités. CHARBONE s’engage à soutenir la transition mondiale vers une économie bas carbone en fournissant des solutions d’hydrogène propre et de gaz de spécialités accessibles et décentralisées, tout en soutenant les clients industriels mal desservis en gaz et en accélérant la transition vers une énergie propre locale. CHARBONE est coté sur la bourse de croissance TSX (TSXV: CH,OTC:CHHYF) ; sur les marchés OTC (OTCQB: CHHYF) ; et à la Bourse de Francfort (FSE: K47) . Pour plus d’informations, veuillez visiter www.charbone.com .

Énoncés prospectifs

Le présent communiqué de presse contient des énoncés qui constituent de « l’information prospective » au sens des lois canadiennes sur les valeurs mobilières (« déclarations prospectives »). Ces déclarations prospectives sont souvent identifiées par des mots tels que « a l’intention », « anticipe », « s’attend à », « croit », « planifie », « probable », ou des mots similaires. Les déclarations prospectives reflètent les attentes, estimations ou projections respectives de la direction de Charbone concernant les résultats ou événements futurs, sur la base des opinions, hypothèses et estimations considérées comme raisonnables par la direction à la date à laquelle les déclarations sont faites. Bien que Charbone estime que les attentes exprimées dans les déclarations prospectives sont raisonnables, les déclarations prospectives comportent des risques et des incertitudes, et il ne faut pas se fier indûment aux déclarations prospectives, car des facteurs inconnus ou imprévisibles pourraient faire en sorte que les résultats réels soient sensiblement différents de ceux exprimés dans les déclarations prospectives. Des risques et des incertitudes liés aux activités de Charbone peuvent avoir une incidence sur les déclarations prospectives. Ces risques, incertitudes et hypothèses comprennent, sans s’y limiter, ceux décrits à la rubrique « Facteurs de risque » dans la déclaration de changement à l’inscription de la Société datée du 31 mars 2022, qui peut être consultée sur SEDAR à l’adresse www.sedar.com; ils pourraient faire en sorte que les événements ou les résultats réels diffèrent sensiblement de ceux prévus dans les déclarations prospectives.

Sauf si les lois sur les valeurs mobilières applicables l’exigent, Charbone ne s’engage pas à mettre à jour ni à réviser les déclarations prospectives.

Ni la Bourse de croissance TSX ni son fournisseur de services de réglementation (tel que ce terme est défini dans les politiques de la Bourse de croissance TSX) n’acceptent de responsabilité quant à la pertinence ou à l’exactitude du présent communiqué.

Pour contacter Corporation Charbone :

Téléphone bureau: +1 450 678 7171

Courriel: ir@charbone.com

Benoit Veilleux

Chef de la direction financière et secrétaire corporatif

Copyright (c) 2025 TheNewswire – All rights reserved.

News Provided by TheNewsWire via QuoteMedia

This post appeared first on investingnews.com

(TheNewswire)

Charbone Hydrogen Corporation

Brossard, Quebec, November 28, 2025 TheNewswire – CHARBONE CORPORATION (TSXV: CH,OTC:CHHYF; OTCQB: CHHYF; FSE: K47) (‘ CHARBONE ‘ or the ‘ Company ‘), a North American producer and distributor specializing in clean Ultra High Purity (‘ UHP ‘) hydrogen and strategic industrial gases today announces its financial and operational results for the three and nine-month periods ending September 30, 2025.

Construction of the Sorel-Tracy facility Phase 1A is completed. All components are installed and connected on-site and commissioning testing in progress, remaining on track to start production of first hydrogen molecule in the coming days.

Q3 2025 HIGHLIGHTS:

  • Net operating loss decreased by 17% to $577,159 in the 3-months period ending September 30, 2025, down from $697,894 in Q2 2025 (activities still tightening general and administrative expenses).

  • Recognition of revenues following the advancement of activities from the Master Collaborative Agreement to support the deployment of a Malaysian green hydrogen project development announced in Q2 2025.

  • On September 30, 2025, the Company issued new secured convertible debentures to replace previous convertible debentures and with an additional amount of $303,634 for a total of $2,050,000. The replacement debentures are bearing monthly interests at a 12% annual rate, convertible at $0.07 per share and maturing in one year.

  • Following the signature of an Asset Purchase Agreement with Harnois Énergies Inc., CHARBONE has completed the acquisition and reinstallation at its Sorel-Tracy site of the operational hydrogen production and refueling equipment. On October 6, 2025, the Company has issued 13,333,334 common shares at $0.075 per share, representing $1 million in equity consideration to Harnois Énergies Inc. as a part of the payment of the acquisition transaction.

CHARBONE’s disciplined financial management, and new strategic partnerships position the company to achieve its vision of becoming a North American leader in clean UHP hydrogen and industrial gases distribution networks. These advancements underscore its commitment to being a game-changer in the energy transition.

Management is motivated to keep working on structuring deals to finance further project investments and expansion,’ said Benoit Veilleux, Chief Financial Officer and Corporate Secretary of CHARBONE . ‘CHARBONE is moving into execution mode to unlock its strong growth potential .


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About CHARBONE CORPORATION

CHARBONE is a developer and producer of clean Ultra High Purity (UHP) hydrogen with a growing industrial gas distribution platform. Through a modular approach, CHARBONE is focused on developing a network of clean hydrogen production facilities throughout North America and select markets abroad, starting with its flagship Sorel-Tracy project in Quebec. The Company’s integrated model reduces risk, enhances scalability, and enables diversified revenue streams through partnerships in helium and other specialty gases. CHARBONE is committed to supporting the global transition to a lower-carbon economy by providing accessible, decentralized clean hydrogen and specialty gas solutions while supporting underserved industrial gas customers and accelerating the shift to localized clean energy. CHARBONE is listed on the TSX Venture Exchange (TSXV: CH) , the OTC Markets (OTCQB: CHHYF) , and the Frankfurt Stock Exchange (FSE: K47) . For more information, please visit: www.charbone.com .

Forward-Looking Statements

This news release contains statements that are ‘forward-looking information’ as defined under Canadian securities laws (‘forward-looking statements’). These forward-looking statements are often identified by words such as ‘intends’, ‘anticipates’, ‘expects’, ‘believes’, ‘plans’, ‘likely’, or similar words. The forward-looking statements reflect management’s expectations, estimates, or projections concerning future results or events, based on the opinions, assumptions and estimates considered reasonable by management at the date the statements are made. Although Charbone believes that the expectations reflected in the forward-looking statements are reasonable, forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties, and undue reliance should not be placed on forward-looking statements, as unknown or unpredictable factors could cause actual results to be materially different from those reflected in the forward-looking statements. The forward-looking statements may be affected by risks and uncertainties in the business of Charbone. These risks, uncertainties and assumptions include, but are not limited to, those described under ‘Risk Factors’ in the Corporation’s Filing Statement dated March 31, 2022, which is available on SEDAR at www.sedar.com; they could cause actual events or results to differ materially from those projected in any forward-looking statements.

Except as required under applicable securities legislation, Charbone undertakes no obligation to publicly update or revise forward-looking information.

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

Contact Charbone Hydrogen Corporation

Telephone: +1 450 678 7171

Email: ir@charbone.com

Benoit Veilleux

CFO and Corporate Secretary

Copyright (c) 2025 TheNewswire – All rights reserved.

News Provided by TheNewsWire via QuoteMedia

This post appeared first on investingnews.com

Here’s a quick recap of the crypto landscape for Friday (November 28) as of 9:00 a.m. UTC.

Get the latest insights on Bitcoin, Ether and altcoins, along with a round-up of key cryptocurrency market news.

Bitcoin and Ether price update

Bitcoin (BTC) was priced at US$91,586.78, up by 1.1 percent over 24 hours. Its lowest price of the day was US$90,485.83, and its highest was US$91,839.31.

Bitcoin price performance, November 28, 2025.

Bitcoin price performance, November 28, 2025.

Chart via TradingView

Meanwhile, Ether (ETH) was at US$3,060.34, up by 1.4 percent over 24 hours. Its lowest price on Friday was US$2,986.86 and its highest was US$3,061.67.

Altcoin price update

  • XRP (XRP) was priced at US$2.24, up by 0.6 percent over 24 hours.
  • Solana (SOL) was trading at US$141.20, down by 0.2 percent over 24 hours.

Fear and Greed Index snapshot

CMC Crypto Fear and Greed Index, Bitcoin price and Bitcoin volume.

Chart via CoinMarketCap.

CMC’s Crypto Fear & Greed Index continues to climb steadily after plunging into ‘extreme fear territory’ in the last to weeks, currently settling at 20 and inching closer to ‘fear.’

Bitcoin’s rebound from the mid-US$80,000 zone has triggered a swift and notable shift in market sentiment, accelerating far faster than most traders anticipated. After briefly cooling near US$80K, many expected a sluggish recovery phase.

Instead, optimism snapped back, with the sentiment index rising ten points over the week and marking one of its sharpest moves in recent months. The increase corresponds with heavier buying activity and reduced caution among traders who had previously stayed on the sidelines during the pullback.

Today’s crypto news to know

Visa expands stablecoin settlement push with Aquanow partnership

Visa (NYSE:V) has deepened its stablecoin strategy by teaming up with Aquanow to support faster settlement across Central and Eastern Europe, the Middle East, and Africa.

The deal plugs Aquanow’s infrastructure directly into Visa’s payment rails, allowing banks and payment firms in the region to settle transactions in approved stablecoins such as USDC.

Visa says the upgrade is aimed at institutions seeking cheaper and quicker cross-border settlement options as demand for digital-asset rails grows. The company also aims to modernize the “back-end plumbing” of payments by reducing reliance on traditional networks with multiple intermediaries.

Aquanow, which processes billions in crypto transactions each month, will provide liquidity and technical support for the integrations.

The collaboration follows Visa’s recent stablecoin payout pilot, Visa Direct, which lets businesses fund transactions in fiat while recipients opt to receive stablecoins directly in their wallets.

UK backs “no gain, no loss” tax model for DeFi activity

The U.K. government has endorsed a major shift in how decentralized finance transactions are taxed, moving to eliminate capital gains charges when users deposit tokens into lending protocols or liquidity pools.

Under the current rules, deposits can be treated as disposals, often generating tax liabilities even when investors haven’t realized any economic gain. HMRC’s updated guidance supports a “no gain, no loss” approach that would tax users only when they withdraw assets and eventually sell them.

The proposal comes after two years of industry feedback from firms, many of which argued that the existing system distorts reality and burdens ordinary users with excessive record-keeping.

The new model would apply to both simple lending and automated market makers, ensuring that only genuine gains or losses are captured for tax purposes.

Australia introduces digital assets bill

Australia has tabled a new digital assets bill aimed at ending years of regulatory uncertainty and preventing a repeat of past offshore failures such as FTX and Celsius. T

The proposed Corporations Amendment (Digital Assets Framework) Bill 2025, would require platforms holding customer crypto to meet the same licensing and conduct standards applied across the financial sector.

Officials said the legislation is designed to bring crypto businesses fully into the regulated economy, ensuring transparency, custody safeguards, and clear accountability.

The bill includes exemptions for smaller operators that process under US$10 million annually and hold less than US$5,000 per customer, mirroring existing thresholds for low-risk financial products.

The government argues that modernizing the rules could unlock as much as US$24 billion a year in productivity and efficiency gains.

Securities Disclosure: I, Giann Liguid, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

Securities Disclosure: I, Meagen Seatter, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

This post appeared first on investingnews.com

The end of the shutdown delivered something rare in Washington: a second chance to get healthcare right. As part of the agreement to reopen the government, Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., committed to holding a vote in December on extending the enhanced premium tax credits in the individual market. That creates an opportunity to avoid steep premium hikes and to begin building a system that works better for patients. 

For Democrats who voted to end the shutdown, the incentives are straightforward. They want to show that their compromise leads to real relief for families facing higher premiums. They will look for a deal that solves the problem in front of them, but they will back away if Republicans turn the bill into another fight over repealing the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare). The task now is to fix what is broken, not revisit old conflicts. 

This moment also gives Republicans a chance to show they can govern. Healthcare costs are a major driver of the affordability crisis facing families. They reduce take-home pay, increase the price of goods and services, and push both households and governments deeper into debt. Employers, who carry most of the cost of coverage for people under 65, feel the pressure directly, and workers feel it in their wages. 

President Donald Trump has already outlined an important principle: instead of routing federal subsidies through insurance companies, direct that support to individuals so they can choose the care and coverage that work best for them. Florida Republican Sen. Rick Scott has made a similar argument, calling on Republicans to fix Obamacare. Combined with growing bipartisan support for price transparency, these ideas point toward a practical strategy that empowers patients and employers and encourages a more competitive market.

Today’s system moves in the other direction. Prices are hidden, administrative layers keep expanding and incentives are misaligned in ways that guarantee prices will rise year after year. These problems are especially severe in the individual market, which has fewer participants, a less healthy risk pool and limited plan competition. Making this market functional again requires more enrollment, more choices and more transparency. 

The December vote is the right moment to begin that shift. A package that addresses the immediate subsidy issue and lays the groundwork for long-term reform is both achievable and necessary. There are practical solutions already developed by center-right institutions such as the America First Policy Institute, the Paragon Institute, leaders in Congress and Trump’s policy proposals. 

The first step is a responsible phase-out of the enhanced premium tax credits through 2026. This avoids an abrupt cutoff and gives the rest of the reforms time to take effect.

Second, Congress should adopt a proposal from the Paragon Institute to restore and reform the Cost Sharing Reduction (CSR) payments in Obamacare, giving qualifying enrollees the option to receive their CSR subsidies directly into a health savings account (HSA). This one change addresses several problems at once. 

JD Vance teases

It lowers premiums and reduces federal costs. When CSR payments were halted in 2017, insurers responded by sharply raising premiums on silver plans, a practice known as ‘silver loading.’ Because premium tax credits are tied to the price of silver plans, this increased federal spending. A 2018 analysis by the Congressional Budget Office found that restoring CSR funding would reduce the federal deficit by about $30 billion over a decade. Providing the funding is less expensive than continuing the current workaround. 

It also creates the budget space needed to phase out the enhanced premium tax credits in a responsible way. The savings could be used to fund the phase-out or to provide more generous HSA contributions from the CSRs to strengthen support for lower-income Americans. 

Most importantly, it empowers patients. According to Paragon, the typical annual HSA contribution for someone receiving CSR assistance would be about $2,000. That is meaningful support that families can control directly. If they remain healthy, unused dollars stay in the account and continue to grow. If they get sick, they can use the funds for out-of-pocket costs. Because the money belongs to them, they have a clear incentive to compare prices and choose high-value care, which encourages greater competition among providers.

Next, Congress should strengthen the individual market’s risk pool by expanding affordable choices. That means allowing any health plan approved by the state insurance commissioner to be included in the exchanges, expanding access to copper plans, adjusting age-rating rules so younger people pay less, and modernizing individual coverage health reimbursement arrangements (ICHRAs) so more small businesses can offer coverage. Practical changes, such as letting employees choose between an ICHRA and a traditional group plan, allowing workers to contribute pretax dollars to close premium gaps and removing unnecessary COBRA requirements, would make ICHRAs more attractive.  

The first step is a responsible phase-out of the enhanced premium tax credits through 2026. This avoids an abrupt cutoff and gives the rest of the reforms time to take effect.

Finally, these reforms should be paired with the bipartisan Patients Deserve Price Tags Act, sponsored by Kansas Republican Sen. Roger Marshall and Colorado Democrat Sen. John Hickenlooper. The bill would strengthen enforcement of price transparency rules so small businesses, self-funded employers and new purchasing groups can contract directly with providers and transparent pharmacies. This would reduce costs, remove middle men, and increase competition.

This is a moment for practical governing. The shutdown deal did not only reopen the government. It opened a door. If Republicans take this opportunity, they can solve a real problem for millions of Americans and begin a long-overdue transition to a health system that puts patients, not bureaucracies, in charge. 

December’s vote could be the start of that transition. It should be. 

Disclaimer: Gingrich 360 has consulting clients in the healthcare industry which may be impacted by changes to healthcare laws. 

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Investor Insight

Heliostar offers a rare combination of immediate cash flow from two producing mines and a significant growth story driven by the high-grade Ana Paula development project. This blend of near-term production, strong margins and a robust pipeline positions the company as a compelling emerging mid-tier gold producer.

Overview

Heliostar Metals (TSXV:HSTR,OTCQX:HSTXF,FRA:RGG1) is an emerging mid-tier gold producer focused on unlocking high-grade gold production in Mexico’s premier mining regions.

The company rapidly expanded its asset base by acquiring a diverse portfolio of producing and development-stage assets. This positions it for long-term, scalable production growth supported by both high-grade underground and large open-pit heap-leach operations.

View of Heliostar Metals

Heliostar now holds two producing mines – La Colorada and San Agustin, with combined production of 30,000 to 40,000 oz of gold – and is advancing the development of its flagship Ana Paula project. Two additional development assets in Mexico, Cerro del Gallo and San Antonio, in addition to exploration projects in North Sonora and Unga in Alaska complete Heliostar’s portfolio. This diversified platform enables the company to fund development through operating cash flow while continuing to expand its resource base.

Heliostar prioritizes capital discipline and low-cost acquisitions, significantly expanding its asset base while maintaining a lean financial structure. With a growing operating cash flow, the company is reducing reliance on equity financing for development.

Heliostar Metals

The company is positioned for strong year-over-year production growth as San Agustin restarts in Q4 2025, La Colorada executes its updated 2025 mine plan, and Ana Paula advances toward construction and expected first production in 2028, following a positive underground PEA in November 2025 and an ongoing feasibility study. These milestones support the company’s strategy of building a multi-asset production base with increasing scale and margins.

Looking ahead, the company has a long-term vision of achieving 500,000 ounces of gold production annually by 2030. This growth will be driven by the development of Ana Paula, followed by Cerro del Gallo and San Antonio, with continued exploration success and strategic acquisitions supplementing organic growth.

Company Highlights

  • Heliostar Metals is rapidly advancing from a junior explorer to a mid-tier gold producer, targeting 150,000 oz per year in the near term and 500,000 oz annually by 2030.
  • Heliostar has rapidly expanded its portfolio with key acquisitions, now controlling two producing mines and three advanced-stage growth assets in Mexico. Added 3.5 million measured and indicated gold ounces for just US$15 million, reinforcing a capital-efficient growth model.
  • The company prioritizes capital discipline and low-cost acquisitions to expand its asset base and maintain a lean financial structure. Unlike many juniors that rely on dilution to grow, Heliostar leverages gold production cash flows to drive project development.
  • Annual gold production at La Colorada and San Agustin mines as of 2025 is between 30,000 to 40,000 oz, with mine operations earning $14.2 million in Q3 2025. Cash flow from these two mines funds Heliostar’s exploration and development without significant dilution.
  • CEO Charles Funk leads a seasoned team of mine builders and exploration experts with a track record of developing world-class deposits.
  • The company also features a favorable shareholder registry: 53 percent institutional investors, 42 percent high-net-worth and retail investors, and 5 percent held by the board and management.

Key Projects

Ana Paula (Flagship Development Project)

Ana Paula is Heliostar’s flagship high-grade underground gold project located in the Guerrero Gold Belt, one of Mexico’s most prolific precious metals regions.

Mountain landscape showing Guerrero Gold Belt near Heliostar Metals

The November 2025 underground PEA confirms Ana Paula as a low-cost, high-margin development opportunity with a nine-year mine life producing approximately 875,000 ounces of gold, averaging roughly 101,000 ounces per year after ramp-up. The project benefits from a wide, high-grade panel that continues to demonstrate strong continuity and exceptional grades, supported by a mineral resource of 710,920 ounces of measured and indicated gold at 6.6 grams per ton (g/t) and 447,500 ounces of inferred gold at 4.24 g/t.

Heliostar has transitioned the project to an underground-only development plan to enhance economics, minimize surface disturbance and reduce capital intensity. The company is advancing engineering and permitting programs, including a permit amendment to convert the existing open-pit approval into an underground operation. A recently expanded 20,000-metre drill program is underway to upgrade inferred resources, expand the mineral envelope and support the ongoing feasibility study. Recent results included 83.2m grading 17.35 g/t gold from 76.0 m and 70.7 m grading 9.38 g/t gold from 49.65 m.

Heliostar intends to advance the existing decline in 2026 to access underground drilling platforms and complete bulk sampling, enabling a construction decision shortly thereafter and positioning the project for first production in 2028. Ana Paula is expected to become the cornerstone asset underpinning Heliostar’s long-term production growth.

La Colorada Mine

Aerial view of Heliostar Metals

La Colorada, located in Sonora, Mexico, is a fully operating open-pit heap-leach mine that underwent a major turnaround in early 2025. Mining was restarted in January 2025, and an updated October 2025 technical report outlines a significantly strengthened operation with a 6.1-year mine life and total production of 286,000 ounces of gold. The mine is expected to produce between 17,500 and 23,800 gold-equivalent ounces in 2025 at competitive cash costs and all-in sustaining costs, benefiting from strong gold prices and improved operational performance.

La Colorada has meaningful opportunities for growth through drilling of the Veta Madre Plus area, which could add up to 28,000 ounces of additional near-surface resource, and the evaluation of the underground potential at El Creston, where deeper drilling has returned high-grade gold and silver intercepts. Further optimization of low-grade stockpiles also offers a route to additional production with minimal capital requirements. With its expanded reserves, improving margins and active exploration pipeline, La Colorada remains a key cash-flow generator and a vital contributor to Heliostar’s self-funded growth strategy.

San Agustin Mine

Heliostar Metals

San Agustin is a heap-leach gold mine in Durango, Mexico, that produced approximately 14,700 ounces of gold in 2024 and continues to generate cash flow through stockpile processing in 2025. The mine is scheduled to restart active mining in the fourth quarter of 2025 following approval of the Corner Permit Area, with the restart plan outlining roughly 44,500 ounces of total gold production over a 1.2-year mine life. The restart requires just US$4.2 million in initial capital, funded entirely from Heliostar’s balance sheet, and delivers strong economics with significant leverage to higher gold prices. Beyond the restart, San Agustin provides meaningful growth potential through near-surface oxide expansion and deeper sulfide and breccia targets, where drilling has identified encouraging mineralization.

Cerro del Gallo Project

Cerro del Gallo is a large-scale, gold-silver development project in the Guanajuato district with 2.86 Moz of measured and indicated gold resources and an additional 1 Moz inferred. The project is advancing through permitting and a pre-feasibility study expected in Q4 2025, which is evaluating a long-life heap-leach operation targeting 80,000 to 100,000 ounces of annual gold production. With its scale, simple metallurgy and strong development profile, Cerro del Gallo represents a cornerstone growth asset supporting Heliostar’s strategy to expand production later this decade

San Antonio Project

San Antonio is an open-pit heap-leach development project in Baja California Sur hosting 1.74 million ounces of measured and indicated gold resources. A January 2025 PEA outlines robust economics, including 1.1 Moz of total production over 13 years, low AISC and an after-tax NPV5 of US$715 million at US$2,600 gold. The project is progressing through additional studies and environmental permitting and provides significant medium-term growth potential within Heliostar’s pipeline.

Unga Project

The Unga project in Alaska is a high-grade gold exploration asset, with an inferred resource of 384,000 oz gold (13.8 g/t). While not a primary focus, the project remains a long-term high-grade growth opportunity.

Management Team

Charles Funk – President & CEO

Charles Funk brings over 18 years of experience in business development and exploration. Before joining Heliostar, he held senior roles at Newcrest Mining and OZ Minerals, two of the world’s most prominent mining companies. Funk led the Panuco discovery for Vizsla Silver in 2020, demonstrating his strong expertise in identifying and advancing high-potential gold and silver deposits. Under his leadership, Heliostar has pursued transformational acquisitions that have rapidly expanded the company’s asset base while maintaining capital efficiency.

Gregg Bush – Chief Operating Officer

A highly regarded mine builder, Gregg Bush has a strong track record in mine development, project integration, and operations management. He previously served as COO of Capstone Mining for nine years and as SVP of Mexico for Equinox Gold. With deep experience in Latin American mining operations, Bush plays a pivotal role in advancing Heliostar’s production assets, optimizing operations and ensuring efficient project execution.

Sam Anderson – VP Projects

Sam Anderson brings 20 years of experience in mine geology and project management, including 17 years at Newmont, where he served as mine geology superintendent and senior manager of exploration business development. He played a significant role in the development of Newmont’s Merian Mine in Suriname, from resource stage to steady-state operation. His expertise in mineral resource expansion and project evaluation is crucial to advancing Ana Paula and Cerro del Gallo toward production.

Mike Gingles – VP of Corporate Development

With over 35 years of corporate and entrepreneurial experience in the mining industry, Mike Gingles has been a key player in major mining deals. He led the Pueblo Viejo and Turquoise Ridge transactions for Placer Dome, two of the largest gold assets in North America. His expertise in strategic partnerships, corporate finance, and project acquisitions has positioned Heliostar for transformational growth.

Hernan Dorado – VP Sustainability & Special Projects

As a fifth-generation miner, Hernan Dorado has more than 20 years of experience in the mining sector, including a founding role at Guanajuato Silver, where he served as COO. He has extensive experience in Mexican mining operations, permitting and sustainability practices, ensuring that Heliostar’s projects meet the highest environmental and social responsibility standards.

Vitalina Lyssoun – Chief Financial Officer

Vitalina Lyssoun is a chartered professional accountant (CPA, CA) with over 16 years of financial expertise with a focus on the resource sector. She has strengths in Canadian and US public company reporting, regulatory and tax compliance, and internal controls. She is fluent in Spanish and has experience in operations based in Mexico, Central America and West Africa. Most recently, Lyssoun built and led the corporate accounting team at Gatos Silver, including through their recent merger with First Majestic Silver.

Stephen Soock – VP Investor Relations & Development

Stephen Soock has been in the mining industry for almost 20 years in both technical and capital markets roles. He has worked in various technical roles at mine sites across Canada, including Vale’s Thompson Nickel operation, Mosaic’s Belle Plaine solution potash mine and Rio Tinto’s Diavik Diamond mine complex. Prior to joining Heliostar, Stephen spent eight years as a sell-side research analyst covering growth and development companies in the junior precious metals space. He graduated from Queen’s University with a B.Sc. in Mining Engineering, is a CFA Charterholder, and a Brendan Woods ranked analyst.

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Corazon Mining Ltd (ASX:CZN) (‘Corazon’ or ‘Company’) is pleased to announce the granting of two key tenements at its Two Pools Gold Project (‘Two Pools’ or the ‘Project’) in the Gascoyne region of Western Australia (Figure 1).

Highlights

  • Two core tenements at the Two Pools Gold Project have been successfully granted by the West Australian Department of Energy, Mines, Industry Regulation and Safety (DEMIRS).
  • Granting allows Corazon to expedite works to enable diamond drilling to commence in early 2026, pending completion of heritage surveys, and discussion with drilling contractors have commenced.
  • The initial program is designed to confirm high-grade historical results and provide essential structural controls on mineralisation.
  • Planning for follow-up Reverse Circulation (RC) drilling at Two Pools is also underway as part of the Company’s systematic exploration campaign.
  • The granting marks another key milestone in the Company’s positive operational reset over the past three months.

The granting of Exploration Licences E52/4460 and E52/4468, which were vended into the Company as part of the Two Pools acquisition – represents a significant regulatory milestone. With tenure now secured, Corazon is moving immediately to finalise preparations for its maiden drill program.

Corazon Mining Ltd Managing Director, Simon Coyle, commented: “The granting of these tenements is an important green light, allowing us to get boots on the ground at Two Pools. We are now moving quickly to secure a rig and finalise logistics to ensure we are drilling early in the new year. Our maiden diamond program is designed to give us a definitive look at the geology and structure of the high-grade zones, setting the stage for a systematic and aggressive exploration campaign throughout 202c.

The reset of the Company over the last three months has been extremely positive and productive. With the team now fully operational and our key tenure granted, we look forward to the exceptional development of both Two Pools and Feather Cap Gold Projects in 202c.”

Click here for the full ASX Release

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Rapid Critical Metals Limited (‘Rapid,’ ‘RCM’ or ‘Company’) is pleased to announce that it has completed the acquisition of the Webbs Consol Silver Project (Webbs Consol) in northeast New South Wales, comprising EL 8933 and EL 9454 from Lode Resources Limited (ASX: LDR) (Lode Resources).

The Board sees the acquisition of the Webbs Consol as a highly accretive strategic investment for Rapid which:

  • Builds critical mass to the Company’s existing Webbs and Conrad high grade deposits;
  • Secures a district-scale silver corridor by consolidating contiguous tenure across a high- grade silver belt in the New England Fold Belt;
  • Unlocks new discovery potential with adjoining tenure, increasing the likelihood of new discoveries between the two high grade silver deposits;
  • Consolidates ownership of three nearby, high-grade deposits supporting unified mine planning, centralised processing options, and potential operating synergies; and
  • Positions Rapid for growth with proximity to existing infrastructure and strong silver market fundamentals, providing a favourable backdrop for accelerated development.

Commenting on the completion of the Webbs Consol acquisition, Byron Miles, Managing Director of Rapid, said:

“The completion of the acquisition of the Webbs Consol builds on the Board’s strategy of becoming one of the ASX’s leading silver-focused growth Companies with a platform in New South Wales with significant potential for further growth.

We have now secured a contiguous silver corridor with outstanding geological prospectivity and opened up exciting potential for new discoveries in the area.

With a prospective portfolio of assets and a team focused on execution and delivery, we are well placed to accelerate exploration and development activities to create long-term value for our shareholders.”


Click here for the full ASX Release

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