Trevali Mining Corporation (“Trevali” or the “Company”)
(TSX: TV; OTCQX: TREVF) is pleased to announce today that
it has entered into a second amended and restated credit agreement
with a syndicate of lenders for an up to US$150 million first lien
secured revolving credit facility, (the “
Amended Revolving
Credit Facility”). In addition, the Company has entered
into an up to US$20 million second lien secured facility agreement
with Glencore Canada Corporation, an affiliate of the Company’s
largest shareholder, Glencore plc (“
Glencore”)
(the “
Glencore Facility” and together with the
Amended Revolving Credit Facility, the
“
Facilities”). Glencore holds approximately 26.3%
of the issued and outstanding common shares of the Company. A
special committee of the Company has reviewed the terms of the
Facilities and has recommended that the board of directors of the
Company (the “
Board”) approve the Facilities.
In combination, the two facilities provide
additional liquidity to Trevali in the amount of up to US$45
million and consist of the following:
- The minimum liquidity requirement under the Amended Revolving
Credit Facility has been eliminated making available up to
an additional US$15 million.
- The availability under the Amended Revolving Credit Facility
has been increased to $135 million making available up to
an additional US$10 million.
- A second lien secured facility agreement with Glencore which is
based on 2020 deliveries of concentrate making available up
to an additional US$20 million.
Ricus Grimbeek, President and CEO commented, “We
are pleased to announce that Trevali has secured additional
liquidity of up to $45 million at a competitive interest rate from
our long-term and supportive lending group and Glencore, our
largest shareholder and partner. With these facilities, and a
covenant waiver until the end of the year in place, our immediate
liquidity concerns are behind us. We can now focus our efforts on
our other two main priorities; safely delivering on the T90 program
to sustainably reduce our cost structure and permanently
de-levering the balance sheet.”
Amended Revolving Credit
Facility
The Amended Revolving Credit Facility increases
the available credit under the revolving credit facility from
US$125 million to US$130 million which can be further increased to
US$135 million following drawdowns under the Glencore Facility in
the aggregate amount of US$10 million. The available credit under
the Amended Revolving Credit Facility can be increased to a maximum
amount of US$150 million with lender consent. The Amended Revolving
Credit Facility bears interest at a rate of LIBOR plus 5.5%. The
term of the Amended Revolving Credit Facility has not changed and
matures on September 18, 2022. The Amended Revolving Credit
Facility revises the financial covenants, removes the minimum
liquidity covenant and waives compliance with the financial
covenants until December 31, 2020. The proceeds of the Amended
Revolving Credit Facility will continue to be used for working
capital and general corporate purposes.
The Bank of Nova Scotia acts as Administrative
Agent, Joint Bookrunner and Co-Lead Arranger and HSBC Bank Canada
acts as Joint Bookrunner and Co-Lead Arranger. The lending
syndicate is comprised of The Bank of Nova Scotia, HSBC Bank
Canada, Société Générale, Bank of Montreal, The Toronto-Dominion
Bank, National Bank of Canada and ING Capital LLC.
Glencore Facility
The new Glencore Facility provides for up to
US$20 million of additional availability, bears interest at a rate
of LIBOR plus 5.5% and matures on September 18, 2022. Under
the terms of the agreement, Glencore will advance to the Company
amounts equal to the volume of dry metric tonnes of zinc
concentrate delivered to Glencore International
AG, an affiliate of Glencore, in a given
month multiplied by the difference
between the annual benchmark treatment charge
(“TC”) and the average monthly spot TC. Advances under the Glencore
Loan will be applicable to deliveries of zinc concentrate between
June 2020 and December 2020.
The Glencore Facility contains substantially the
same representations, warranties, covenants, events of default and
financial covenants as the Amended Revolving Credit Facility. The
proceeds of the Glencore Facility will be used for working capital
and general corporate purposes. The Glencore Facility will be
secured by the same security as the Amended Revolving Credit
Facility, on a second-lien basis. The Glencore Facility shall not
be repaid until the Amended Revolving Credit Facility has been
repaid in full.
Related Party Transaction
The Glencore Facility was approved by a special
committee of independent directors of Trevali composed of Jill
Gardiner, Russell Ball and Richard Williams. The special committee
considered all options reasonably available to the Company to
address its immediate liquidity needs and determined that the
Facilities represented the best available option to the
Company.
The entry into the Glencore Facility constitutes
a related party transaction under Multilateral Instrument 61-101 –
Protection of Minority Shareholders in Special Transaction
(“MI 61-101”). The Glencore Facility is exempt
from the formal valuation and minority shareholder approval
requirements of MI 61-101, because the Glencore Facility is a
credit facility obtained from a related party but does not have an
equity or voting component and the Company, as well as the special
committee believes it is on reasonable commercial terms that are
not less advantageous to the Corporation than if the Glencore
Facility were obtained from an arm’s length party..
The Glencore Facility was announced less than 21
days prior to its closing and, as such, MI 61-101 requires that the
Company explain why the shorter period was reasonable or necessary
in the circumstances. In the Company’s view, it was necessary to
close the Glencore Facility within that time period because our
senior lenders required the Glencore Facility to be entered into
concurrently with the Amended Revolving Credit Facility, and that
facility was needed to ensure the Company had reasonable liquidity
available to fund its existing operations and immediate working
capital requirements. Therefore, the shorter period between
announcing and closing the Glencore Facility was reasonable and
necessary in the circumstances.
ABOUT TREVALI
Trevali is a global base-metals mining company,
headquartered in Vancouver, Canada. The bulk of Trevali’s revenue
is generated from base-metals mining at its four operational
assets: the 90%-owned Perkoa Mine in Burkina Faso, the 90%-owned
Rosh Pinah Mine in Namibia, the wholly-owned Caribou Mine in
northern New Brunswick, Canada and the wholly-owned Santander Mine
in Peru. In addition, Trevali owns the Halfmile and Stratmat
Properties and the Restigouche Deposit in New Brunswick, Canada,
and the past-producing Ruttan Mine in northern Manitoba, Canada.
Trevali also owns an effective 44%- interest in the Gergarub
Project in Namibia, as well as an option to acquire a 100% interest
in the Heath Steele deposit located in New Brunswick, Canada. The
shares of Trevali are listed on the TSX (symbol TV), the OTCQX
(symbol TREVF), the Lima Stock Exchange (symbol TV), and the
Frankfurt Exchange (symbol 4TI). For further details on Trevali,
readers are referred to the Company’s website (www.trevali.com) and
to Canadian regulatory filings on SEDAR at www.sedar.com.
Investor Relations
contact:Brendan Creaney – Vice President, Investor
RelationsEmail: bcreaney@trevali.comPhone: +1 (778) 655-6070
Cautionary Note Regarding
Forward-Looking Information
This news release contains “forward-looking
information” within the meaning of Canadian securities legislation
and “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of the United
States Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995
(collectively, “forward-looking statements”). Forward-looking
statements are based on the beliefs, expectations and opinions of
management of the Company as of the date the statements are
published, and the Company assumes no obligation to update any
forward-looking statement, except as required by law.
Forward-looking statements relate to future events or future
performance and reflect management’s expectations or beliefs
regarding future events including, but not limited to, statements
with respect to the intended use of proceeds from the Amended
Revolving Credit Facility and the Glencore Facility. In certain
cases, forward-looking statements can be identified by the use of
words such as “plans”, “expects”, “outlook”, “guidance”, “budget”,
“scheduled”, “estimates”, “forecasts”, “intends”, “anticipates” or
“believes”, or variations of such words and phrases or statements
that certain actions, events or results “may”, “could”, “would”,
“might”, “will be taken”, “occur” or “be achieved” or the negative
of these terms or comparable terminology. By their very nature,
forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks,
uncertainties and other factors which may cause the actual results,
performance or achievements of the Company to be materially
different from any future results, performance or achievements
expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements. Such
factors include, among others, risks related to changes in project
parameters as plans continue to be refined; future prices of zinc,
lead, silver and other minerals and the anticipated sensitivity of
our financial performance to such prices; possible variations in
ore reserves, grade or recoveries; dependence on key personnel;
potential conflicts of interest involving our directors and
officers; labour pool constraints; labour disputes; availability of
infrastructure required for the development of mining projects;
delays or inability to obtain governmental and regulatory approvals
for mining operations or financing or in the completion of
development or construction activities; counterparty risks;
increased operating and capital costs; foreign currency exchange
rate fluctuations; operating in foreign jurisdictions with risk of
changes to governmental regulation; risks relating to widespread
epidemics or pandemic outbreak including the COVID-19 pandemic; the
impact of COVID-19 on our workforce, suppliers and other essential
resources and what effect those impacts, if they occur, would have
on our business; compliance with environmental laws and
regulations; land reclamation and mine closure obligations;
challenges to title or ownership interest of our mineral
properties; maintaining ongoing social license to operate; impact
of climatic conditions on the Company’s mining operations;
corruption and bribery; limitations inherent in our insurance
coverage; compliance with debt covenants; competition in the mining
industry; our ability to integrate new acquisitions into our
operations; cybersecurity threats; litigation and other risks and
uncertainties that are more fully described in the Company’s annual
information form, interim and annual audited consolidated financial
statements and management’s discussion and analysis of those
statements, all of which are filed and available for review under
the Company’s profile on SEDAR at www.sedar.com. Although the
Company has attempted to identify important factors that could
cause actual actions, events or results to differ materially from
those described in forward-looking statements, there may be other
factors that cause actions, events or results not to be as
anticipated, estimated or intended. Trevali provides no assurance
that forward-looking statements will prove to be accurate, as
actual results and future events may differ from those anticipated
in such statements. Accordingly, readers should not place undue
reliance on forward-looking statements.
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