The Market Online - At The Bell

Join our daily newsletter At The Bell to receive exclusive market insights

Those seeking to fund mining projects needed to look further afield when it came to attracting seed capital, according to well-known investment expert Rick Rule.

Speaking as part of a panel at the MiningNews Select conference in Perth, Mr Rule – founder of Sprott Wealth Management – told investors and other audience members that good projects would always find funding, but a more ambitious approach needed to be adopted.

“I think even in the so-called bad years over the last five years, really good projects finance themselves,” he added.

“I think that the issuer community is going to have to be less ethnocentric than they’ve been in the past. In the past, if you couldn’t get (a project) financed in Perth, you went to Sydney, then you went to London.

“Now you might now need to go to Shanghai or you need to go to Singapore, or you might need to go to Tokyo.  It might be that the traditional sources of capital that you relied on no longer have any capital, which means that you have to source out other types of capital.”

Asked if there was enough capital around to fund mining, he commented “I absolutely believe there is”.

More From The Market Online
Punishment concept

Ora Banda’s share price punished as FY25 production to fall -5%

Ora Banda Mining (ASX:OBM) has fallen to the tune of -10% as shareholders punish the company…
Dale Gillham's photo, and wording 'Words from Wealth Within's Chief Analyst Dale Gillham.

Virgin returns to the ASX: Buy the hype or wait for a dip?

The return of Virgin Australia to the ASX is one of the most anticipated IPOs of 2025. With Bain Capital reducing its stake...
Indian defence concept

BluGlass inks deal with Indian defence dept. to supply specialist laser

BluGlass (ASX:BLG) has confirmed its receipt of an A$230K order from the Indian Department of Defence…
The Market Online Video

ASX Market Open: Sell-off as Musk-Trump spat overshadows Xi Jinping call | June 6, 2025

The Australian market looks set to continue its trickling down slide through to the closing bell in Week 23, with Thursday’s red close