Upon closing, Sandstorm and Equinox will hold 34% and 30% respective interests in Rosedale, which intends to change its corporate name to Sandbox Royalties and seek a public listing on a Canadian stock exchange. It also expects to undertake a non-brokered private placement financing at 70c per share for minimum proceeds of C$5 million.
“Equinox Gold has surfaced tremendous value as a significant and supportive shareholder of Solaris Resources and i-80 Gold, our previous spin-out companies, and intends to continue that track record with Sandbox Royalties,” Equinox chief executive Christian Milau said in the statement.
“With the creation of Sandbox (…) we are taking royalties that don’t currently receive their warranted value within Sandstorm’s existing portfolio and surfacing their value so that our shareholders can benefit now,” Sandstorm Gold president and CEO Nolan Watson said.
The new firm will hold a total of 23 royalty assets, of which nine will come from Sandstorm, four from Equinox and one asset, Cuiu Cuiu, will overlap between the two firms.
It will also own the existing royalties held by Rosedale Resources, the companies said.
Sandbox will have exposure to a range of commodities including gold, silver, copper, zinc, graphite and uranium, as well as cash flow from producing royalties. The company will be led by Greg Smith as president and chief executive officer, and Marcel de Groot as chair.
Smith would transition from Equinox Gold president to the new role at Sandbox and would continue to represent Equinox Gold on the boards of its previous spin-out companies, Solaris Resources and i-80 Gold.
Ross Beaty, Equinox Gold chairperson, said that Smith would focus on building Sandbox, while Equinox would slow its merger and acquisition activities to focus on developing its internal growth pipeline, including the new Santa Luz gold mine, in Brazil, and the large expansion projects at Los Filos, Aurizona and Castle Mountain, as well as the Greenstone construction project.
Known move
The creation of Sanbox Royalties mirrors a strategy used by Sandstorm in February this year, when it created Horizon Copper.
This transaction saw the Vancouver-based royalty company sell a 30% interest in the Hod Maden copper project in Turkey and other assets, in exchange for a $200 million gold stream on Hod Maden, together with equity and debt consideration.
Earlier this month, Sandstorm acquired Nomad Royalty as well as a package of royalties from Glencore’s affiliate BaseCore Metals Royalty, for a combined total of $1.1 billion.
As part of the deal, Sandstorm agreed to sell a 1.66% net profits interest on the Antamina copper mine in Peru to Horizon, while retaining a long-life silver stream on the mine.