Seabridge Gold Inc
XMUN:SRM
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Seabridge Gold Inc
XMUN:SRM
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Seabridge Gold Inc
Seabridge Gold is a mineral exploration company that looks for large gold and copper deposits in Canada and advances them through drilling, studies, and permitting work. Its main asset base is a set of long-life projects that it tries to prove up as major future mines rather than run as a producing miner today. The company does not sell metal to end customers; it sells the possibility of future mine development through its project portfolio and ownership of mineral rights. Seabridge makes money in the way most early-stage mining companies do: it raises capital from investors and then spends that money on exploration, land holdings, engineering, and permitting to increase the value of its projects. If a project is developed, value can later come from a sale, a joint venture, a royalty, or the company building its own mine with a partner. That means its business is tied more to discovering and de-risking deposits than to operating a steady production business. What makes Seabridge different is that it focuses on very large, long-duration resource projects in remote parts of Canada and tries to create value by controlling the land package and moving it toward mine readiness. It sits early in the mining value chain, between pure exploration and mine construction, and its success depends on geology, permitting, infrastructure, and the willingness of larger mining companies or financiers to back development.
Seabridge Gold is a mineral exploration company that looks for large gold and copper deposits in Canada and advances them through drilling, studies, and permitting work. Its main asset base is a set of long-life projects that it tries to prove up as major future mines rather than run as a producing miner today. The company does not sell metal to end customers; it sells the possibility of future mine development through its project portfolio and ownership of mineral rights.
Seabridge makes money in the way most early-stage mining companies do: it raises capital from investors and then spends that money on exploration, land holdings, engineering, and permitting to increase the value of its projects. If a project is developed, value can later come from a sale, a joint venture, a royalty, or the company building its own mine with a partner. That means its business is tied more to discovering and de-risking deposits than to operating a steady production business.
What makes Seabridge different is that it focuses on very large, long-duration resource projects in remote parts of Canada and tries to create value by controlling the land package and moving it toward mine readiness. It sits early in the mining value chain, between pure exploration and mine construction, and its success depends on geology, permitting, infrastructure, and the willingness of larger mining companies or financiers to back development.