GoldMining is a pre-revenue mineral exploration company that acquires and holds a portfolio of gold and gold-copper resource-stage projects across the Americas, spanning Canada, the U.S., Brazil, Colombia, and Peru. The company does not mine or produce any minerals — it acquires projects with existing resource estimates and advances them through exploration and technical studies, with the goal of eventually monetizing them through partnerships, joint ventures, or outright sales. GoldMining's four principal projects are Titiribi (Colombia), a large gold-copper porphyry system; La Mina (Colombia), which has a completed preliminary economic assessment; São Jorge (Brazil), an actively drilled gold deposit; and Whistler (Alaska), a large gold-copper porphyry held through GoldMining's ~74% stake in publicly listed subsidiary U.S. GoldMining. GoldMining generates no operating revenue and funds itself entirely through equity issuances, primarily via rolling at-the-market equity programs. Cash raised is used to maintain projects in good standing, fund exploration, and cover overhead. The company's value is tightly linked to the gold price, which drives both the perceived value of its resource assets and its ability to raise capital on favorable terms. GoldMining's core strategy is to accumulate a large, diversified resource base cheaply — often during periods of depressed gold prices — and unlock value as gold prices rise, exploration advances, or strategic partners emerge.
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