Company Description
Mako Mining Corp. (MAKOF) is a publicly listed gold mining, development and exploration company focused on precious metals projects in the Americas. According to the company’s disclosures, Mako operates producing gold mines and advances development-stage and exploration assets, with its shares trading on the TSX Venture Exchange under the symbol MKO and on the OTCQX market under the symbol MAKOF.
Core Operations and Assets
Mako Mining’s primary producing asset is the San Albino gold mine in Nueva Segovia, Nicaragua. The company describes San Albino as a high-grade open pit gold mine that ranks among the highest-grade open pit gold mines globally and notes that the broader land package offers district-scale exploration potential. San Albino’s operations include open pit mining, milling and gold recovery, supported by stockpiles and ongoing engineering and geotechnical work.
In addition to San Albino, Mako owns the Moss Mine in northwestern Arizona, an open pit gold mine. The company has reported residual leaching activities, restart and ramp-up work, and the transition toward steady-state production at Moss, supported by a refurbished processing plant and new mining contractor arrangements. Moss contributes gold sales alongside San Albino and is part of Mako’s plan to generate cash flow from multiple operating assets.
Mako also holds a 100% interest in the Eagle Mountain Project in Guyana, South America. Eagle Mountain is described as a PEA-stage gold project undergoing engineering, environmental studies and mine permitting. Work programs have included geotechnical drilling, hydrology and hydrogeology studies, environmental geochemistry, cultural heritage and community surveys, noise, air and biodiversity surveys, and infrastructure siting studies. These activities support the preparation of an Environmental Impact Assessment for submission to the Guyana Environmental Protection Agency.
Expansion and Project Pipeline
Beyond its existing mines and Eagle Mountain, Mako has entered into agreements to acquire the Mt. Hamilton Gold-Silver Project in White Pine County, Nevada, USA, through the acquisition of Mt. Hamilton LLC. The company notes that Mt. Hamilton is a permitted open pit, heap leach gold-silver project with a mineral resource estimate prepared in accordance with Canadian disclosure standards. The project has all major state and federal permits required to allow construction of an open pit, heap leach operation.
Mako and Sailfish Royalty Corp. have agreed on a structure under which Mako will acquire Mt. Hamilton LLC in exchange for a gold stream and a net smelter return royalty on the Mt. Hamilton Project. As part of this arrangement, Mako has taken operational control of Mt. Hamilton and responsibility for associated obligations, subject to closing conditions including shareholder and regulatory approvals. The company also highlights a tungsten-copper-molybdenum exploration target at Mt. Hamilton, based on historical drilling and historical estimates, and indicates plans to review historical core and data to advance this target.
Exploration and District-Scale Potential
At and around San Albino in Nicaragua, Mako is active in exploration. The company reports drilling at the Las Conchitas area and at El Golfo, located immediately south of its San Albino and Las Conchitas deposits within the El Jicaro concession. Drilling at El Golfo has intersected multiple high-grade gold and silver intervals in subparallel quartz veins, confirming structural continuity along strike and down dip. Mako states that El Golfo appears to represent the southwest extension of mineralized structures found at Las Conchitas and that mineralization remains open in multiple directions.
These exploration activities are designed to test geochemical anomalies, mapped structures and historical workings, with the objective of defining additional high-grade mineralization that could potentially be incorporated into future mine plans. The company emphasizes that host rocks and mineralization styles at El Golfo are similar to those being mined at San Albino and Las Conchitas.
Financial and Corporate Characteristics
Mako Mining reports revenue from gold sales at San Albino and Moss, mine operating cash flow, adjusted EBITDA and net income, and uses non-GAAP measures such as cash costs per ounce and all-in sustaining costs to describe its operating performance. The company has disclosed periods of record quarterly gold revenue and increases in cash balances, as well as repayment of debt and equity financings to support operations, exploration and project development.
The company has also announced a normal course issuer bid accepted by the TSX Venture Exchange, permitting the repurchase and cancellation of a portion of its outstanding common shares. Mako’s public filings and news releases reference its relationship with Wexford Capital LP and funds managed by Wexford as significant shareholders, and describe related party transactions reviewed by independent special committees and subject to applicable securities law requirements.
Geographic Footprint and Commodity Focus
Mako Mining’s asset base is concentrated in the Americas. Its producing and development-stage gold projects are located in Nicaragua, Arizona, Guyana and Nevada. The company’s primary commodity is gold, with additional exposure to silver at several projects. At Mt. Hamilton, Mako also identifies a tungsten-copper-molybdenum target below the gold-silver mineralization, which it views as a potential critical metals opportunity based on historical work.
Across these jurisdictions, the company’s activities span the full project lifecycle from exploration drilling and resource definition to permitting, construction readiness and commercial production. Mako’s disclosures emphasize high-grade open pit mining at San Albino, open pit operations and heap leaching at Moss and Mt. Hamilton, and ongoing technical and environmental work at Eagle Mountain.
Business Model and Strategy
According to its public statements, Mako Mining’s business model centers on operating high-grade open pit gold mines and using cash flow from these operations to fund exploration and development across its portfolio. The company highlights the role of San Albino as a cornerstone asset and notes that Moss and, subject to completion of the acquisition, Mt. Hamilton are intended to contribute additional operating cash flow. Eagle Mountain is being advanced through technical studies and permitting as a development project.
Mako’s news releases describe the use of equity financings, streaming and royalty agreements, and normal course issuer bids as part of its capital allocation and corporate finance approach. The company also references the use of non-GAAP performance measures commonly used in the gold mining industry to provide additional insight into operating performance and cash generation.
FAQs about Mako Mining Corp. (MAKOF)
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SEC Filings
No SEC filings available for Mako Mng.
Financial Highlights
Upcoming Events
Special meeting: acquisition restructuring
Special shareholder meeting
Outside closing date
Permits expected
25% options vest
25% options vest
RSU restriction ends
25% options vest
25% options vest
Stock options expire
Short Interest History
Short interest in Mako Mng (MAKOF) currently stands at 38.3 thousand shares, up 13.7% from the previous reporting period, representing 0.0% of the float. Over the past 12 months, short interest has increased by 1300.7%. This relatively low short interest suggests limited bearish sentiment.
Days to Cover History
Days to cover for Mako Mng (MAKOF) currently stands at 1.0 days. This low days-to-cover ratio indicates high liquidity, allowing short sellers to quickly exit positions if needed. The ratio has shown significant volatility over the period, ranging from 1.0 to 1.8 days.