
Originally Posted by
Gaddafi Duck
I've done great with mcewen. It's double from where I entered in. Plus, they got the best CEO in the business. He's merged two companies without destroying shareholder value. He's reiterated his support for providing a shareholder friendly dividend once production ramps up, oh, and not the 1% yield goldcorp and silver Wheaton toss to their shareholders. You might as well keep that money to buy back shares or do some capex. Don't bother sending me a check for 1%.
All I know is my CEO ain't raiding the treasury with ridiculous salaries, he won't do boneheaded buyouts where he grossly overpays for mediocre assets, and he's a good guy. How many ceo's worth over $250 million actually send you emails to RSVP to eat lunch with them while they do a slide show presentation in front of a group of a dozen other people? Not that it adds much investment appeal, but it demonstrates his character. They just finished a rights offering for shareholders, something extremely rare for American companies to do, and in the conference call he made his direct line personally available if shareholders, big or small, needed help converting their rights into shares priced at a 50% discount from the market share price. So, how bad is MUX performing for shareholders when mcewen just offered each shareholder the chance to buy more shares 50% lower than the share price? It's essentially a one time massive dividend if you decided to sell your rights. If not, you just bought shares at a substantial discount..
You won't find a better guy in any business. Buffett's too into his own jokes to bother thanking loyal small shot shareholders, and the other 99% of ceo's just care about the big bonus check and only make themselves available to the biggest shareholders.