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    Agnico’s 14% Cascadia Minerals stake: Yukon copper-gold economics for mine planners

    March 30, 2026|

    Reviewed by Joe Ashwell

    Agnico’s 14% Cascadia Minerals stake: Yukon copper-gold economics for mine planners

    First reported on MINING.com

    30 Second Briefing

    Agnico Eagle Mines is taking a 14.21% non-diluted stake in Cascadia Minerals by buying 29.31 million units at C$0.26, with attached warrants that could lift its interest to 19.9%, providing about C$7.6 million of a total C$8.9 million financing. The funds will advance Cascadia’s 180 km² Carmacks copper-gold project in central Yukon, which has a 2023 PEA outlining a post-tax NPV5 of C$330 million, 38% IRR and measured/indicated resources of 651 million lb copper and 302,000 oz gold, ahead of a 15,000 m drill campaign in spring 2026. A parallel strategic alliance in Yukon’s Stikine Terrane will see Agnico fund up to C$3 million over three years per project (and potentially a further C$12 million) for 51–80% earn-ins, plus a separate Catch property deal requiring C$10 million over three years, signalling sustained funding for porphyry exploration and drilling contractors in the district.

    Technical Brief

    • Each Cascadia unit bought by Agnico includes half a warrant exercisable at C$0.32 per share.
    • Additional 10 million units are being acquired from other investors at C$0.26 per unit.
    • Flow-through participants pay C$0.384 per unit, creating a premium over Agnico’s straight equity price.
    • Carmacks covers 180 km² in central Yukon, proximal to the past-producing Minto copper mine.
    • Cascadia’s market capitalisation sits around C$42.2 million, with recent trading near C$0.25 per share.
    • Cascadia has staked 2,834 new claims in the Stikine Terrane for alliance-funded porphyry exploration.
    • New Stikine claims extend Macks, Milner, Byng and Mars, plus four new blocks: Bunker Hill, Hilo, Hyde, Mustard.
    • At Catch, Agnico can earn 51% by spending C$10 million in three years, minimum C$1 million by end‑2027.
    • Catch earn-in can be lifted to 80% via an additional C$20 million over a further three-year period.

    Our Take

    Agnico Eagle Mines has appeared repeatedly in our recent copper and gold coverage, including backing Osisko Metals’ Gaspé copper project and featuring in record-reserve results, suggesting this Cascadia Minerals stake is part of a broader strategy to secure optionality in earlier-stage base-metal and precious-metal assets in Canada.

    The ability for Agnico to earn up to 80% in Yukon projects like Carmacks and Catch with relatively modest staged expenditures (C$3 million then C$12 million, plus a separate C$10 million at Catch) positions these as low-cost exploration ‘chips’ compared with the company’s multi‑billion‑dollar market capitalisation, limiting balance-sheet risk while testing a large 180 km² land package.

    With Carmacks already showing a post-tax NPV of $330 million and a 38% IRR in a 2023 PEA, this financing and earn-in structure gives Cascadia leverage to accelerate drilling without surrendering control outright, a pattern seen in several of the 1169 Mining stories where juniors trade minority project interests for funding rather than full asset sales.

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    Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.

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