A plain-language guide to engaging with Purebase as an investor, what to look for in any resource investment, and the industrial demand that underpins gold and silver.
Purebase shares information and answers questions; the decision is always yours, taken with your own advisers.
Start with how Purebase earns: it markets and sells produced gold and silver and captures the margin between the mine gate and the buyer. Why Purebase and The Difference set out the thesis.
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Read the materials closely, verify the facts that matter to you, and form your own view. The FAQ is a good place to start with questions.
Purebase is not a financial adviser. Discuss any decision with your own legal, tax and investment advisers before committing capital.
When you are ready, we will talk through the specifics and next steps with you directly.
Questions worth asking of any minerals or resource investment — not only this one.
Many companies sell a drill program and the hope of a future find. Ask whether there is real, produced metal moving to market today — or only a promise of one.
Producing metal is only half the job. Ask how, and to whom, a company actually sells — and whether that route is secured or left to chance.
Value often leaks to third-party traders between the mine and the buyer. Ask who captures the marketing margin on the way to market.
Founder-led companies can carry concentration risk. Look for board independence, a clear succession plan, and properly documented arrangements.
Where companies share an owner, inter-company deals should be arm's-length and benchmark-referenced — not set internally. Ask how the terms are struck.
Be wary of words like “guaranteed.” Credible operators speak of “secured” and “aligned,” and clear forward-looking claims with compliance.
Both metals trade in deep, liquid global markets — in part because demand is spread across so many industries. Silver in particular carries dual precious and industrial demand.
Broad demand. Deep, liquid markets. Real product to place.