Annual Financial Report

RNS Number : 5861E
Condor Resources PLC
01 June 2012
 

               

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

7.00am on 1 June 2012


 

 

 

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

Condor Resources announces its results for the Year Ended 31st December 2011 and announces notification of its Annual General Meeting

 

HIGHLIGHTS

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

 

Condor Resources ("Condor", the "Company" or the "Group"), the AIM listed Central American gold exploration company, announces its results for the year ended 31st December 2011 (the "Accounts"). The Company's Annual General Meeting is to be held at the offices of Speechly Bircham LLP, 6 New Street Square, London EC4A 3LX at 11 a.m. on 25 June 2012. The Accounts have today been posted to Shareholders and a copy of both documents is available from the Company's website, www.condorresourcesplc.com. The Accounts are set out in Appendix 1 to this announcement and the Notice of AGM in Appendix 2.

 

 

HIGHLIGHTS

 

·      La India Project Mineral Resource increased to 1,620,000 oz gold at 5.6g/t of which 260,000 oz gold at 7.1g/t gold is at JORC Indicated category, with the balance in the Inferred category.

·      Acquisition of the Espinito Mendoza Concession in the heart of La India Mining District to gain 100% ownership of exploration and mining rights over the entire District.

·      Completion of 82 drillholes for 14,813m and 48 trenches for 814m on the La India District.

·      Discovery of wide moderate grade zones of gold mineralisation on the main India-California veins suggesting open pit mining potential.

·      A maiden JORC Inferred Mineral Resource of 80,000 oz gold at 3.5g/t and 500,000 oz silver at 56g/t on the Rio Luna Concession in the Central Highlands of Nicaragua.

·      Estrella Concession returned encouraging initial exploration results including a trench of 9m at 5.44g/t.

·      Macquarie Bank subscribed for £3M of new ordinary shares at 9 pence per share and became cornerstone investor.

 

 

POST PERIOD HIGHLIGHTS

 

·    A Conceptual Mining Study concluded that 81,000 oz per annum gold production at La India Project is, at a conceptual level, both technically feasible and economically viable on underground mining alone. Consideration was not given to an open pit production component

·    £2.5M raised by way of a private placement of 50m new ordinary shares at a placement price of 5 pence per share.

 

 

For further information please visit www.condorresourcesplc.com or contact:

 

Condor Resources plc

Mark Child, Executive Chairman and CEO

+44 (0) 20 7408 1067

 

Luc English, Country Manager Nicaragua & El Salvador

+505 8854 0753

 

Beaumont Cornish Limited

 

 

Ocean Equities Limited

 Roland Cornish. James Biddle

+44 (0) 20 7628 3396

 

Will Slack

+44 (0) 20 77864385

 


Farm Street Media

Simon Robinson

+44 (0) 7593 340107

 


 

 

Click on, or paste the following link into your web browser, to view the associated PDF document:

http://www.rns-pdf.londonstockexchange.com/rns/5861E_1-2012-5-31.pdf

 

 

 

 

About Condor Resources Plc:

 

Condor Resources plc is an AIM listed exploration company focused on developing gold and silver resource projects in Central America.  The Company was admitted to AIM on 31st May 2006 with the stated strategy to prove up JORC Resources in Nicaragua and El Salvador.  Condor has six 100% owned concessions in La India Mining District ("La India Project"); three 100% owned concessions in three other project areas and 20% in the Cerro Quiroz concession in Nicaragua.  In El Salvador, Condor has 90% ownership of four licences in two project areas.

 

Condor's concession holdings in Nicaragua currently contain an attributable JORC compliant resource base of 1,707,000 ounces of gold equivalent at 5.5 g/t in Nicaragua and an attributable 1,004,000 oz gold equivalent at 2.6g/t JORC compliant resource base in El Salvador. The Resource calculations are compiled by independent geologists SRK Consulting (UK) Limited for Nicaragua, and Ravensgate and Geosure for El Salvador.

 

Disclaimer

 

Neither the contents of the Company's website nor the contents of any website accessible from hyperlinks on the Company's website (or any other website) is incorporated into, or forms part of, this announcement.

 

 



 

Appendix 1

 

 

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

CHAIRMAN'S STATEMENT

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

Dear Shareholder,

 

I am pleased to announce Condor Resources PLC's ("Condor" or "the Company" or "the Group", www.condorresourcesplc.com) annual report for the 12 month financial year to 31st December 2011. Condor's JORC Code Mineral Resource in the Republic of Nicaragua ("Nicaragua") increased 41 fold in 2011 from 41,000 oz gold on 1st January 2011 to 1.7 Million oz gold on 31st December 2011. In the Republic of El Salvador ("El Salvador") Condor's JORC Resource of 747,000 oz gold and 22.38 million oz silver or 1,120,000 oz gold equivalent at 2.6g/t remained unchanged during the period due to the moratorium on all exploration and mining in El Salvador, however, 10% of the Company's resource in El Salvador was gifted to a UK Charitable Foundation whose beneficiaries are the most needy and poor in that country.

 

The significant increase in the JORC Code Mineral resource to 1.7 million oz gold equivalent in Nicaragua was primarily on La India Project, which now hosts a JORC resource of 1.62 million oz gold at 5.6g/t, with the balance of 87,000 oz gold equivalent at 3.9g/t on the Rio Luna Project. The Mineral Resource increase of over 1.66 million oz gold was achieved through a combination of 12,800m drilling during the year by Condor, digitization of historic data, recalculation of existing resources and the acquisition of a new concession.

 

During 2011 Condor completed a long term strategic objective of acquiring nearly 100% ownership of the entire La India Gold Mining District, except a few percent held by a local cooperative. This was achieved by the acquisition of one new concession, the Espinito Mendoza Concession in the heart of District, and through gaining full ownership of the La India and Espinito San Pablo concessions, now merged into one 'La India Concession'. Condor now holds a contiguous exploration and mining concession package over an area of 166.66 km² covering the historic gold workings that produced an estimated 576,000 oz gold at 13.4g/t between 1938 and 1956 and adjacent areas of known gold mineralisation. It has taken Condor 5 years to accumulate this valuable concession package. Condor is the first company to own 100% of the concessions in La India Project since the privatisation of the mining industry in 1992.

 

In April 2011, Macquarie Bank invested £3m in Condor at 9 pence per share, which has provided the Company with additional funds to complete the 2011 drill programme on La India Project.

 

On 24th August 2011, Condor announced it had acquired 100% of the Espinito-Mendoza Concession for US$1,625,000 (see announcement for full details). Condor digitised the 4339m of drilling, 1595m of trench sampling and 489 underground channel samples completed on the Espinito Mendoza Concession and passed this data to SRK Consulting (UK) Limited who converted the Soviet style resource of 513,000oz gold at 11.1g/t to a JORC Code Mineral Resource of 209,000 oz gold at 6.9g/t in December 2011.

 

Condor also holds 100% ownership of three other concessions in Nicaragua; the Estrella and Potrerillos concessions which contain historic gold mine workings and the Rio Luna Concession which contains extensive gold mineralisation and as of this year a maiden JORC Inferred gold Resource. In addition the Company has a 20% interest in a fourth Concession, Cerro Quiroz, which contains established gold mineralisation and is adjacent to B2Gold's operating gold mine at La Libertad.

 

During 2011, Condor's understanding of La India Project was significantly enhanced by site visits on three occasions from three separate expert consultants from SRK; an independent resource consultant, a structural geologist and a mining engineer. The resultant reports; independent resource updates, structural geologist's report and mining concept study have proved highly valuable in understanding the geology and potential of La India Project. Furthermore, SRK is engaged to assist in the design of the current drill programmes and optimise the conversion of inferred to indicated resources using a 3D model of the drill results and exploration data.

 

SRK's most recent resource update and mining concept study have highlighted the need for resource definition drilling to remain focused on the 3 main vein sets with the ultimate objective of feeding a large commercial mill. The three Vein Sets which are separated by only 1km to 1.5km are La India Vein Set with 730,000 oz gold at 5.3g/t, the America Vein set with 405,000 oz gold at 6.2g/t and the Mestiza Vein Set with 334,000 oz at 7.0g/t. The mining concept study concludes that an 80,000 oz per annum mill fed by ore from the 3 vein sets is, at a conceptual level, both technically feasible and economically viable.  The operating cash costs for an 81,000 oz p.a. mill are US$600 per oz assuming a head grade of 5.0g/t. If La India Project is "high graded" with a cut off grade of 4g/t and head grade of 6.3g/t the operating cash costs fall to US$390 per oz. The study allows for underground mining alone and makes no provision for open pit. Following the current drill programme of 7,300m, the size of a potential mill is likely to increase to over 100,000 oz gold production per annum as the overall resource increases and open pit targets are included in an updated mining study.

 

 

 

 

 

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

CHAIRMAN'S STATEMENT

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

La India Project has potential for two open pits and should not be viewed purely as a narrow vein underground deposit. The main La India Vein is circa 2,000m long, has an average width of 2.5m and grade of 6.1g/t; running parallel and within 20 meters are the hanging wall veins also known as the California Veins, which are at least 1,300m long, 9m wide and have an average grade of 4g/t gold assuming a 2.5g/t cut off grade. In the middle of La India valley the 2 veins converge for approximately 600m, as seen in Condor's drill hole LIDC067 which has a drill intercept of 34m true width at 2.31g/t. The second open pit potential is at the Central Breccia were Condor has recently completed 546m drilling and 1,392m trenching. The excellent drill intercepts of 45.8m at 4.24g/t, 38.7m at 1.28g/t and 8.8m at 6.7g/t when combined with best trench results of 23m at 3.63g/t, 25m at 2.28g/t and 49m at 1.26g/t have helped define a hydrothermal breccia, which has a surface expression of 300m by 150m.

 

A considerable effort was made in 2011 into building a business at La India Project for the long term. An experienced field manager, a qualified accountant, a health and safety officer and an environmental officer were recruited. Condor's main office in Nicaragua is now at a field camp in the local village of La India. Six geologists and support staff, including technical staff are located at La India. An accommodation block for 20 people has been built and a core shed capable of storing 20,000m of drill core has been constructed.

 

The moratorium on metallic mining in the Republic of El Salvador ("El Salvador") has now been in place for just over 4 years. The Government of El Salvador awarded a tender to the Tau Group of Spain www.taugroup.com to complete a Strategic Environmental Study on the benefits of Mining to El Salvador ("EAE" or the "report") in September 2010. The Tau Group completed the EAE and submitted it to the Government in September 2011; a copy is available on the Internet. 

 

On 18th May 2012, I met the Director of the Department for Regulating Hydrocarbons and Mines at his office in the Ministry of the Economy in San Salvador. Following this meeting and a review of the EAE my understanding of the process is as follows: The EAE is currently awaiting final comment from the Ministry of the Environment ("MARN"), which can add formal comments to the report. The EAE will then be submitted to the Ministry of the Economy ("MINEC") and on to the President for a final decision. 

 

The EAE is an independent professional report written by the Tau Group. The report does not seek to conclude whether metallic mining is possible in El Salvador, but recommends what should be done to permit metallic mining in a safe, secure and environmentally friendly manner.

 

The EAE highlights the institutional weaknesses in government for regulating metallic mining. There are currently no metallic mines in operation in El Salvador, consequently at Government level, there is a lack of understanding of the economic benefits that mining can bring coupled with a lack of practical experience of regulating the mining industry. The EAE looks at the economic benefits of mining; the potential numbers to be employed by the mining industry and forecast gold production over the next decade.

 

The Salvadoran economy has performed poorly in recent years with GDP contracting 3% in 2009; there is an over-reliance on remittances from the United States, which account for 17% of GDP and 36.5% of the population is below the poverty line (source CIA World Factbook www.cia.gov). Against this backdrop it is difficult to see how the economic benefits of mining, particularly in providing employment and alleviating poverty will not prevail and a decision to permit mining, accompanied by robust environmental laws, will result.

 

The conclusion of the EAE is that the Government either passes a law to prohibit mining or passes laws to regulate and permit mining. During my most recent visit to El Salvador in May 2012, which included meetings with officials at MINEC and a number of prominent businessmen, I formed the clear view that a decision will be taken on the continuation or otherwise of the present moratorium on mining in the country and I remain cautiously optimistic that the outcome will be a resumption of mining.

 

We continue to monitor carefully developments in El Salvador in relation to the present moratorium.  Although there is a clear risk that the El Salvador exploration licences and related intangible assets may become impaired should the outcome of the Government's consideration be a decision to pass a law prohibiting metallic mining, the board has concluded that they are not currently impaired.  However, in the circumstances, the board has concluded that it is not appropriate to continue to capitalise expenditure in relation to the El Salvador projects and this has ceased.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

CHAIRMAN'S STATEMENT

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

 

Turning to the financial results for the year 2011, the operating loss was £1,975,408 (2010: £502,605).  Additionally the Company raised £3,402,500 (2010: £280,500) through the exercise of warrants and options, and a private placement.  The Company made foreign exchange gains of £12,404 (2010: £111,096). The increase/(decrease) of cash and cash equivalents was (£68,129) (2010: £339,438).  The net cash balance at 31st December 2011 was £854,146.

 

The Company proposes to change its name to "Condor Gold plc" at the forthcoming AGM on 25th June 2012. This is proposed as there is a company with the same name, "Condor Resources Inc" listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange, which may cause confusion for people when using internet search engines in an attempt to locate the company website and has caused confusion at meetings held by the Company in Canada this year. The proposed name change more accurately reflects the metal which is the core of the Company's exploration activity. The Company also proposes a 20 into 1 share consolidation for two reasons: Firstly, the recent spread between the bid and offer price on the LSE has been between 10% to 15% in recent months as the current share price is around 4pence, such a wide spread is not in shareholders interest. Secondly, at meetings this year in the United Sates and Canada investors have articulated that 610m shares outstanding is, in their opinion, too many and is viewed negatively.

 

The strategy for 2012 is to increase the economic potential of the three vein sets by increasing the overall resource size, converting inferred to indicated resources and proving open pit potential on La India valley and the Central Breccia. Condor's focus has shifted to the economics of proving a large commercial mine.  The main excitement about La India Vein Set is the potential for a large open pit. The main La India Vein is circa 2,000m long, has an average width of 2.5m and grade of 6.1g/t; running parallel and within 20 meters are the hanging wall veins also known as the California Veins, which are at least 1,300m long, 9m wide and have an average grade of 4g/t gold assuming a 2.5g/t cut off grade. In the middle of La India valley the 2 veins converge for approximately 600m, as seen in Condor's drill hole LIDC067 which has a drill intercept of 34m true width at 2.31g/t. The current 6,800m drill programme is expected to treble the size of the indicated resource to circa 400,000 oz gold, increase the headline figure to 800,000 oz gold resource on La India Vein Set and prove open pit potential. By October 2012, Condor is aiming for an increase in the overall resource of La India Project to 1.75m oz gold of which 500,000 oz will be in the indicated category. Condor is also due to release a preliminary economic assessment or scoping study in October 2012. The current plan is to complete a pre-feasibility study at La India Project once the indicated resources have increased to between 700,000oz and 800,000oz gold.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

PROJECT OVERVIEW

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

 

CURRENT CONCESSION HOLDING

 

Nicaragua Projects

Project

Concession

Ownership

Expiry Date

Area (km2)

La India Gold District

La India

100% Owned

January 2027

68.50

 

Espinito Mendoza

100% Owned

November 2026

2.00

 

Cacao

100% Owned

January 2032

11.90

 

Santa Barbara

100% Owned

April 2034

16.20

 

Real de la Cruz

100% Owned

January 2035

7.66

 

Rodeo

100% Owned

January 2035

60.40

Boaco

Rio Luna

100% Owned

June 2035

43.00

RAAN

Estrella

100% Owned

April 2035

18.00

Nueva Segovia

Potrerillos

100% Owned

December 2031

12.00

La Libertad-Santo Domingo Gold District

Cerro Quiroz

20% Owned

April 2035

22.50

TOTAL

 

 

 

261.16

All concessions in Nicaragua are combined exploration and exploitation concessions.

 

El Salvador Projects

Project

Concession

Ownership

Expiry Date

Area (km2)

La Calera

La Calera

90% Owned

Admin. freeze

42.00

El Pescadito

El Pescadito

90% Owned

Admin. freeze

50.00

 

Carolina

90% Owned

Admin. freeze

40.50

 

El Gigante

90% Owned

Admin. freeze

42.50

TOTAL

 

 

 

175.00

All exploration licences in El Salvador are in administrative freeze whilst El Salvador's moratorium on mining and exploration remains in effect. Condor owns 90% interest in El Salvador licences (remaining 10% gifted to the Condor Resources El Salvador Charitable Foundation).

 

 

 



CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

PROJECT OVERVIEW

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

 

 

CURRENT GLOBAL JORC-CODE MINERAL RESOURCE

 

The following Mineral Resource estimations have been reported by independent geologists in accordance with the terms and definitions of the JORC Code. The Mineral Resource Estimations for Nicaragua were completed by SRK Consulting (UK) Ltd. (La India), and for El Salvador by Geosure Exploration and Mining Solutions (La Calera and part of Pescadito) and Ravensgate Resources (Part of Pescadito).

 


Tonnes

Gold

Silver

Gold Equivalent

JORC


(kt)

Grade

(g/t)

Contained

(koz)

Grade

(g/t)

Contained

(koz)

Grade (g/t)

Contained

(koz)

Attributable Contained

(koz)

Category

 

Nicaragua Projects (100% Condor owned)

La India

1,160

7.1

264

-

-

7.1

264

264

Indicated

Project

7,790

5.4

1,356

-

-

5.4

1,356

1,356

Inferred

Total

8,940

5.6

1,620

 

 

5.6

1,620

1,620

Ind + Inf

Rio Luna

 

694

3.5

80

56

500

3.9

87

87

Inferred

Total

9,640

5.5

1,700

-

-

5.5

1,700

1,707

Ind+Inf

 

El Salvador Projects (90% Condor owned)

Pescadito

7,100

1.9

434

97

22,100

3.9

802

722

Inferred

La Calera

 

6,000

1.6

313

1.4

280

1.6

317

286

Inferred

Total

13,150

1.8

747

53

22,370

2.6

1,120

1,008

Inferred











Grand Total

22,790

3.3

2,446

53

22,870

3.9

2,830

2,715

Inferred

 

Note that tonnage is rounded to nearest 10,000t, gold grade is rounded to nearest 0.1g/t, silver and gold equivalent grade to nearest 1g/t, contained gold and gold equivalent to nearest 1,000oz and contained silver to nearest 10,000oz. Gold equivalent is calculated using silver:gold ratio of 60:1. Attributable gold is calculated as 90% interest in El Salvador licences (remaining 10% gifted to the Condor Resources El Salvador Charitable Foundation).

 

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

OPERATIONS REPORT

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

NICARAGUA - OPERATIONS REPORT

 

The 2011 exploration campaign focused on drill testing the flagship La India Project to increase the overall Mineral Resource at the Inferred category with up to four active drilling rigs. The drilling was supplemented by exploratory rock chip and trench sampling which successfully generated new drilling targets including the newly discovered Central Breccia. Acquisition of the Espinito Mendoza Concession in the heart of La India Project and assumption of 100% ownership of the La India Concession (previously the La India and Espinito San Pablo concessions) increased the Company's tenure on La India Project to cover almost all known gold mineralisation in the historic mining district. An updated Mineral Resource for La India Project incorporating most of the years drilling data as well as historic exploration data for the newly acquired Esinito Mendoza Concession was completed and announced at the end of the year.

 

Elsewhere, verification trench sampling and the first modern sampling of the historic mine workings at Estrella confirmed high grade gold mineralisation on the Estrella Concession and a maiden Mineral Resource estimation was completed on the Rio Luna Concession.

 

From 1 January to 31 December 2011

QA/QC Samples

Project

Concession

Prospect

Rock Chip Samples

Trenches Completed

Trench (m)

Trench Samples

Drillholes Completed

Total Drilling (m)

RC Drilling (m)

RC 1m Samples

Diamond Core Drilling (m)

Core Samples

Field dups

Lab dups

Blanks

Standards


















La India

La India

La India Vein Set

8

5

75

27

32

6872

253

35

6619

2098

3

0

69

70



America Vein Set

5

17

260

174

26

4137

67

63

4070

453

8

2

21

21



Mestiza Vein Set

2

2

24

18

10

1698



1698

336

0

0

10

10



San Lucas

9




12

1786



1786

442

0

0

16

16



Central Breccia

3

12

372

321

2

320



320

229

7

0

15

15


El Rodeo

Andrea Vein


4

20

24







4

0

1

1


Santa Barbara

Santa Barbara

3































RAAN

Estrella



8

64

48







1


2

2


















Totals

30

48

814

612

82

14813

320

98

14493

3558

23

2

134

135

 

 

Summary of exploration activity completed in 2011.

 

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

OPERATIONS REPORT

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

NICARAGUA - OPERATIONS REPORT (continued)

 

La India Mining District

 

La India, Espinito Mendoza, Cacao, Santa Barbara, Real de la Cruz and El Rodeo Concessions

(Condor 100% ownership).

 

Condor holds a 166.66 square kilometre concession package comprising 6 contiguous concessions over nearly the whole of the historic La India Mining District. An estimated 576,000 ounces of gold at 13.4g/t was produced from the concession area by Noranda Mining over an 18 year period prior to the sudden closure of the La India Mine in 1956.  All of the production is believed to have come from Condor's La India and Espinito Mendoza concessions, with the bulk coming from the La India and America-Constancia underground mines on the La India Concession. Prior to Condor gaining ownership of the Project previous explorers had completed a total of 157 drillholes for 20,264m and over 4,700m of trenching. Combined with over 9,000 original underground mine grade control samples and Condor's 2006-2008 exploration on the Cacao Concession the Company started the year with an advanced exploration project and enough data to make an initial JORC-Code Inferred Mineral Resource of over 909,000 oz gold at the beginning of the year.

 

During 2011 Condor completed 82 drillholes for 14,813m of drilling (including 4 re-drills), primarily designed to extend existing resource blocks along strike and to depth. This was supplemented by sampling of a further 8 drillholes for 1509m of drilling that had been completed by a previous explorer in 2004 but for which the original assay data was not available. The drilling was designed to increase the existing Mineral Resource at the Inferred category (1) along strike of the existing resource blocks by wide-spaced drilling where trench data demonstrated surface, and (2) down-dip beneath the existing resource blocks where previous drilling and/or historical mining data indicated that high grade gold mineralisation was open to depth. In the process the drilling also defined a new group of veins in the hangingwall and footwall of the principal historic mine workings which has made a significant addition to the overall resource and has changed the dynamics of the project area by defining wide zones of moderate grade gold mineralisation that may be amenable to open pit mining in addition to the narrow vein underground mining that has already been successfully demonstrated by historic mining activity.

 

A revised Mineral Resource Estimation of 8.94Mt at 5.6g/t for 1.62Moz gold, of which 1.165Mt at 7.1g/t for 0.26Moz gold is at JORC Indicated category, with the balance in the Inferred category was announced at the end of the year. The Mineral Resource update included drilling data completed up to November 2011; comprising 72 drillholes (including 4 re-drills) for 12,013m of drilling. At the time of the Mineral Resource estimation the assay results had not been received for the last 10 drillholes completed in 2011. These drillholes will be included in a future Mineral Resource update.

 

 

 

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

OPERATIONS REPORT

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

 

NICARAGUA - OPERATIONS REPORT (continued)

La India Mining District (continued)

 

The year-end Mineral Resource estimation amounts to a 0.71Moz increase on the Mineral Resource announced a year earlier. The majority of the mineral resource increase is attributable to the drilling programme. The acquisition of the last significant gold mineralised area in the La India Mining District, the 2km² Espinito Mendoza Concession in August 2011 for a consideration of US$1,625,000 accounted for one quarter of the 2011 Mineral Resource increase through an Inferred JORC Mineral Resource of 0.98Mt at 6.7g/t for 209,000 oz gold estimated on the Espinito Mendoza Concession using historic mining a nd exploration data. A minor component of the Mineral Resource increase can be attributed to the acquisition of further historic exploration and mine data.

 

In addition to the drilling programme which concentrated on extending the existing Mineral Resources the Company completed surface exploration including rock chip sampling and 32 trenches for 686m. A trenching programme on the Andrea Vein in the north of the Project area started the previous year was completed. Sampling of trenches and artisanal workings has defined a total of four enrichment zones with a combined strike length of 1.3km on a 2.3km long epithermal vein with best intercepts of 1.9m at 6.53 g/t gold and 1.4m at 6.63 g/t gold from trenches located 250m apart along strike.

 

General prospecting in the structural centre of the La India District resulted in the discovery of a gold mineralised quartz and quartz-calcite hydrothermal breccia, dubbed the Central Breccia, with trench intercepts of up to 11m at 2.74g/t gold, open to extension, defined by trench sampling in the initial phase of trench sampling before the end of the year. Two exploratory drillholes were completed at the end of the year. This initial drilling did not repeat the trench results but instead intersected a wide quartz calcite hydrothermal breccia system dominated by background gold mineralisation of 0.1-0.3g/t gold. However higher grade zones within one of the drillholes of 0.72m drill width at 5.22g/t Au from 45m drill depth and 7.62m drill width at 0.95g/t Au from 96.01m drill depth indicate that high grade gold mineralisation does exist at depth which warrants further drill testing.

 

 

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

OPERATIONS REPORT

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

 

NICARAGUA - OPERATIONS REPORT (continued)

La India Mining District (continued)

 

Post Period Development for La India Project

·    Further trenching on the Central Breccia extended the known extent of the gold mineralisation with intercepts of 40.9m at 1.58g/t gold and 48m at 1.28g/t gold from two trenches located 25m apart on the Central Breccia.

·    A Mining Concept Study undertaken by SRK Consulting (UK) Limited concluded that the La India Project is, at a conceptual level, both technically feasible and economically viable. The study concluded that the La India Project could potentially support production of up to 81,000 oz per annum on underground mining alone. Consideration was not given to an open pit production component. Open pit mining could significantly improve the production economics and production rate, exploration for ore zones with open pit mining potential is an important component of the 2012 exploration programme.

 

 

 

 

 

 

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

OPERATIONS REPORT

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

 

NICARAGUA - OPERATIONS REPORT (continued)

Other Project Areas

 

Rio Luna Concession(Condor 100% ownership)

 

The Rio Luna Concession covers an area of 43 square kilometres in the Central Highlands of Nicaragua. A maiden JORC Inferred Mineral Resource of 694kt at 3.5g/t for 80,000 oz gold and 280kt at 56g/t for 500,000 oz silver was estimated on five separate resource blocks on three separate vein sets within the concession area. In total this is a gold equivalent Mineral Resource of 87,000 oz gold equivalent at 3.9g/t gold equivalent (using a gold:silver ratio of 1:60). The Mineral Resource estimation was calculated using exploration data from Canadian explorer First Point Minerals Corporation who completed a programme of soil, auger, rock chip, trench and drill sampling between 2004 and 2006. That exploration included 58 exploratory diamond core drill holes for 6,262m that tested a number of selected target zones along over 18km of gold-bearing epithermal quartz veins identified by surface exploration. The current Mineral Resource is confined to five resource blocks where there is sufficient density of trench and drilling data to demonstrate continuity of gold mineralisation along strike and to depth. The Resource blocks have a combined strike length of only 1,750m to a depth of less than 150m below surface, except on one cross section where drilling tested to a depth of 250m below surface.

 

 

This initial Mineral Resource Estimate demonstrates that where drilling has tested segments of the 18km of epithermal veining currently recognised at Rio Luna the gold mineralisation extends to depths of up to 250m below the surface, and gold mineral concentrations are at sufficient grade to warrant further exploration. Gold mineralisation on all five prospects included in the Mineral Resource remains open along strike and to depth. Trenching has already defined surface mineralisation along strike of the resource blocks with some significant mineralised zones remaining to be drill tested and brought into the Mineral Resource, such as 2.2m at 8.3g/t gold.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

OPERATIONS REPORT

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

NICARAGUA - OPERATIONS REPORT (continued)

 

Estrella Concession (Condor 100% ownership)

 

A reconnaissance exploration trip to the 18 square kilometre Estrella Concession in Nicaragua's historic 'Mining Triangle*' in the northeast of the country confirmed high grade gold intercepts reported by previous explorers over a 400m strike length that defines the historic Estrella Gold Mine. Three trenches were excavated for 58m with a best intercept of 9.0m at 5.44g/t gold demonstrating that mineralisation occurs along at least two close-spaced sub-parallel structures, and that in the weathered zone gold mineralisation extends beyond the veins into the wall rock. Intense artisanal mining activity was taking place at the time of the visit along a 100m strike length where the vein passed close to a river, and channel sampling of the artisanal miners pits returned average grades of 11.85g/t gold over 1m intervals across the high-grade core of the veins. Condor geologists took advantage of a 14m long section of the historic mine that has been opened-up by artisanal miners to collect the first underground channel samples since the mine closed and was rewarded with three intercepts averaging 0.9m at 8.53g/t gold. The Company is encouraged that this gold mineralised epithermal vein is one of two to three parallel veins separated by short intervals of 5 to 10m of country rock.

 

The challenge on this concession is to extend the size of the mineralised zone beyond the 400m strike length defined to date. It is highly unlikely that the mineralised fluids that deposited this ore body were restricted to an isolated structure and future exploration activity will aim to discover extensions to the known structure and/or other gold mineralised veins in the vicinity.

 

 

The historic Estrella Gold Mine exploited at least 250m of this strike length at its western end where the structure crosses a low ridge and valley and runs part way up the crest of a ridge. No mine plans or production data are available for the Estrella Mine (also referred to as the Estrella de Venus Mine in old reports); however it is believed that the mine was worked on two or three levels for a few years before being destroyed in 1935 during civil unrest. Abandoned steel mine trolleys and rail tracks in the area are testament to this period of mechanised mining. It is believed that the mine operated a 20-50 tonne per day capacity mill during production and it is likely that the mining relied on gravity dewatering and did not extend below the level of the drainage adit at river level.

 

The width, grade and consistent strike continuity of gold mineralisation along the 400m strike length defined to date suggests that the Estrella Structure is part of a much larger epithermal system. Condor plans to undertake exploration aimed at discovering further mineralised structures in the vicinity of Estrella in order to define a gold footprint capable of supporting a commercial mine.

* The "Mining Triangle" of the Bonanza-Rosita-Siuna areas of northeast Nicaragua is estimated to have historical production totalling more than 5 million ounces of gold, 4 million ounces of silver, 158,000 tons of copper, and 106,000 tons of zinc.

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

OPERATIONS REPORT

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

NICARAGUA - OPERATIONS REPORT (continued)

 

Potrerillos Concession (Condor 100% ownership)

 

No exploration activity was carried out on Condor's Potrerillos Concession located adjacent to and along strike of the historic San Albino Mine in the North of Nicaragua. There was significant exploration activity on the neighbouring San Albino Murra Concession, on and adjacent to the old San Albino Mine workings. The geological structure exploited at San Albino runs through the Potrerillos Concession for a 3.5km strike length. Channel sampling of trenches and old mine adits between 2007 and 2009 which returned intersections of up to 1 metre at 29.5 g/t gold.

 

 

Cerro Quiroz Concession (Condor 20% ownership)

 

Condor holds a 20% interest in the 22.5 square kilometre Cerro Quiroz Concession located approximately 15 kilometres from the La Libertad Gold Mine which is operated by TSX-listed Canadian mining company B2Gold. B2Gold hold the majority 80% Interest in the Concession and under the terms of the agreement manage and wholly fund exploration up until completion of the first 2000m of drilling has been completed, after which Condor will be required to provide equity funding to maintain the Company's interest. No exploration was undertaken during 2011.

 

 

 

EL SALVADOR - OPERATIONS REPORT

 

In El Salvador the Government continues the suspension of metallic mining and exploration initiated in 2007. This moratorium is being administered by the Ministry of Economy ("MINEC"). Condor continued to maintain an administrative presence in El Salvador in order to retain the existing licence holding and to lobby the government to support mining and represent Condor and the mining industry interests in the Government initiated Strategic Environmental Evaluation of the Metallic Mining Sector of El Salvador ("EAE"). The EAE was completed during the year and has been submitted to the Government of El Salvador for review.

 

Condor holds ownership of four Exploration Licences in El Salvador split between two project areas; the Pescadito Project containing the Carolina, El Pescadito and El Gigante licences, and the Calera Project containing the La Calera Licence. The licences cover a combined area of 175km². In order to protect the Company's assets Condor has maintained legal actions against MINEC and the Ministry of Environment ("MARN").

 

The Company recognises that the resolution lies with the central government, and since 2007, and increasingly during the period Condor has played a leading role in lobbying the Government in favour of a resumption of mining activity.

 

Condor gifted 10% of the issued ordinary share capital of Minerales Morazan S.A. de C.V., the local subsidiary that holds all the company's exploration licences in El Salvador, into a Charitable Foundation that is incorporated in the United Kingdom and regulated by the UK Charities Commission and been established for the benefit of the people of El Salvador.

 

 

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

OPERATIONS REPORT

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

EL SALVADOR - OPERATIONS REPORT (continued)

 

The Articles of Association of the "Condor Resources El Salvador Charitable Foundation" include the key aims of:

 

•               Conservation, protection and improvement of the physical and natural environment

•               Prevention or relief of poverty for the public benefit

•               Advancement of education for people under the age of 25 years old

•               Sustainable development, by promoting of sustainable means of economic growth

•               Relief of sickness and preservation of health

•               Relief of financial hardship by making grants or providing services

•               Relief of suffering among victims of natural or other kinds of disasters

 

The reason that Condor has set up a Charitable Foundation is to demonstrate to the Government of El Salvador that Condor takes its corporate and social responsibilities very seriously.  Condor has looked at a number of ways to work with the Government of El Salvador to develop a sustainable business model for all parties.

 

 

Pescadito Project

 

El Pescadito, Carolina and El Gigante Licences (Condor 100% ownership)

 

The Pescadito project, located in eastern El Salvador near the town of San Miguel, comprises three contiguous concessions covering an area of 133 square kilometres: El Pescadito, Carolina and El Gigante licences. Numerous old workings and mines located within project area have been exploited intermittently since the 18th Century. Although no accurate production figures are available, it is estimated by the El Salvadorian Government that the historic El Divisidero Mine produced 100,000 ounces gold and 5.6 million ounces silver at grades of 3.8g/t gold and over 200 g/t silver in the early 1900's from the Project area. Over 10,000 metres of drilling has been completed to date by Condor and previous explorers. The Pescadito Project contains a JORC Code Inferred Mineral Resource of 430,000 oz gold at 1.9g/t and 22.1 million oz silver at 96g/t. This equates to a gold equivalent resource of 802,000 oz at 3.9g/t using a silver to gold ratio of 60:1. The Mineral Resource is a combination of an historical Mineral Resource certified at JORC Code Inferred Category by independent geological consultant Ravengate Pty Ltd and an Inferred Mineral Resource estimated by independent geological consultant Geosure Exploration and Mining Solutions. 

 

La Calera Project

 

La Calera Licence (Condor 100% ownership)

 

La Calera Concession, located 45km northeast of the capitol city of San Salvador, consists of a single concession covering 42 square kilometres. A total of five sub-parallel veins have been identified spread across a 500m wide corridor with over 1200m of strike length defined to date. Previous explorer Pacific Rim Gold of Canada outlined the main mineralised zone through a programme of trench sampling and drilling. Condor completed an extensive programme of trenching in 2006 and 2007 to better define the outcropping and sub-cropping vein system and in February 2008 announced an JORC-Code Inferred Mineral Resource of 6 million tonnes at 1.6 g/t gold and 1.4 g/t silver for 310,000 ounces gold and 270,000 ounces silver. The Mineral Resource was calculated by independent geological consultant Geosure Exploration and Mining Solutions.

 

 



CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

REPORT OF THE DIRECTORS

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

 

DIRECTORS REPORT

 

The directors present their report with the financial statements of the Company and the Group for the year ended 31 December 2011.

principal activity

The principal activity of the Group in the year under review was that of exploration of gold and silver concessions in El Salvador and Nicaragua. The principal activity of the Company was that of a holding company. 

review of developments and future prospects

The Group's financial performance for the year was in line with directors' expectations. The group loss after taxation for the year to 31 December 2011 amounted to £1,972,147 (2010: £1,310,448).  No dividends were paid during the year.

The Group, at the end of the financial period has interests in six concessions in the La India Mining District and a further four in four project area in Nicaragua, and four licences in two project areas in El Salvador. The Company will continue to assess each individually with the intention of focusing on core concessions with the highest probability of producing an economic resource, and principally at La India. The Company is currently investing in the La India concession which is discussed in greater detail in the 'Operations Report and Projects Overview.' Operations in El Salvador are curtailed by the Government moratorium on all exploration and mining in that country. The El Salvador operation has been reduced to an administrative role until environmental and drill permits are awarded, this situation is described in detail in 'Principal Risks and Uncertainties' below.

KEY PERFORMANCE INDICATORS

The key indicator of performance for the Group is its success in identifying, acquiring, developing and divesting investments in projects so as to create shareholder value.

Control of bank and cash balances is a priority for the Group and these are budgeted and monitored closely to ensure that it maintains adequate liquid resources to meet financial commitments as they arise.

At this stage in its development, quantitative key performance indicators are not an effective way to measure the Group's performance.

However, a qualitative summary of performance in the period in the Chairman's Statement and the Operations Report and Project Overview is an effect way of measuring the key performance of the Company.

directors

The directors shown below have held office during the year:

M L Child

K P Eckhof             - Resigned (11/05/2011)

J Mellon                 - Appointed (11/05/2011)

R Davey                  - Appointed (30/12/2011)

 

 

 

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

REPORT OF THE DIRECTORS

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

 

substantial shareholders

On 31 May 2012 the Company was aware of the following interests in 3% or more of the Company's issued share capital:

Shareholders

Number of ordinary shares

Holding %

Mr M Child

68,750,000

11.3

Oracle Management Limited

50,991,971

8.4

Macquarie Bank Limited

33,333,333

5.5

 

directors interests

The directors in office during the year under review and their interests in ordinary shares and unlisted options of the company at 31 December 2011 were:



31 December 2011

31 December 2010

Directors

Holding

Number of shares

Number of options

Number of shares

Number of options

M L Child

Direct

68,750,000

14,000,000

48,000,000

10,250,000


Indirect

-

-

-

-

K P Eckhof

Direct

-

-

-

-


Indirect

-

-

10,160,000

4,750,000

R Davey

Direct

-

-

-

-


Indirect

-

-

-

-

J Mellon

Direct

-

-

-

-


Indirect

2,000,000

5,000,000

-

-

 

The interests of the directors in options to subscribe for ordinary shares of the company were:


Exercise price (p)

Latest exercise date

As at 1 January 2011

Granted during the year

Forfeit/ lapsed/ exercised in the year

As at 31 December 2011

DIRECTORS







M L Child

15

30 May 2011

1,250,000

-

1,250,000

-


1

1

23 December 2013

15 April 2016

9,000,000

5,000,000

-

-

-

-

9,000,000

5,000,000

K P Eckhof

15

30 May 2011

1,750,000

-

1,750,000

-


1

23 December 2013

3,000,000

-

3,000,000

-

J Mellon

1

15 April 2016

5,000,000

-

-

5,000,000








 

The interests of the directors in warrants to subscribe for ordinary shares of the company were:


Exercise price (p)

Latest exercise date

As at 1 January 2011

Granted during the year

Lapsed/ exercised in the year

As at 31 December 2011

DIRECTORS







M L Child (1)

1

10 July 2011

13,750,000

-

13,750,000

-


1.5

10 July 2011

5,000,000

-

5,000,000

-


2

10 July 2011

5,000,000

-

5,000,000

-

(1)   These warrants were acquired by M L Child for cash during fiscal 2008 and 2009.

 

 

 

 

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

REPORT OF THE DIRECTORS

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

PRINCIPAL RISKS AND UNCERTAINTIES

In common with other companies operating in natural resources exploration, the Group's activities are speculative and involve a high degree of risk.

The Group's exploration work involves participation in geological work programmes. Interpretations of the results of these programmes are dependent on judgements and assessments that are speculative and these interpretations are applied in designing further work programmes to which the Company can commit significant resources.

Work programmes often involve drilling and other geological work that present significant engineering challenges that are subject to unexpected operational problems. Furthermore activities generally take place in remote locations that can be subject to unexpected climate events, and possible acts of terrorism, criminal threats and piracy and potential environmental risks.

The Group operates in different countries where political, economic, legal, regulatory and social uncertainties are potential risk factors. In this regard, political uncertainties in El Salvador, in particular in relation to the ongoing moratorium in processing applications for exploration and mining, have resulted in operational delays in that country. 

During 2010 and in 2011 to date considerable progress was made in El Salvador:

·      In March 2010 the Government of El Salvador ('GoES') placed a tender for an independent 'Strategic Environment Study on the Metallic Mining sector in El Salvador' ('EAE') to inform the GoES how to conduct mining in a safe, secure and environmental friendly manner.

·      In September 2010 the Ministry of Economy ('MINEC') and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced that Tau Consultora Ambiental of Spain (the 'Tau Group') www.taugroup.com had been awarded the contract for SES.

·      In December 2010, GoES finalised the appointment of a Supervisory Committee to assist GoES on the interpretation of the Tau Group's EAE.

·      In September 2011, the Tau Group completed the EAE and submitted it to GoES, a copy is available on the internet.

·      In May 2012, Condor's Chairman met with the Director of the Department for Regulating Hydrocarbons and Mines at his office in the Ministry of the Economy in San Salvador. Following this meeting and a review of the EAE mthe Company's understanding of the process is as follows: The EAE is currently awaiting final comment from the Ministry of the Environment ("MARN"), which can add formal comments to the report. The EAE will then be submitted to the Ministry of the Economy ("MINEC") and on to the President for a final decision.

·      The Company has received assurances from a number of relevant Government officials that it will maintain its concession areas following the outcome of the moratorium process.

It is the Company's view that although the situation remains uncertain and it is unlikely that the necessary environmental and drilling approvals to enable re-commencement exploration programmes on key projects will be forthcoming in the near future, the indications are that the GoES will allow exploration and mining following the EAE, Mining Policy Review and amendments to the current Mining Law.  In the meantime operations in El Salvador remain on a care and maintenance basis.

GOING CONCERN

The operations of the Group are currently financed from funds which the Company has raised from shareholders.  The Group has not yet earned revenues and is still in the exploration phase of its business.  In common with many exploration companies, the Company raises finance for its exploration and appraisal activities in discrete tranches to finance its activities for limited periods only. Further funding will be required from time to time to finance the Company's activities and after the balance sheet date the Company secured £2,500,000 by way of a private placing of new shares.  The directors prepare and monitor cash flow projections based on different funding scenarios and make assumptions about the availability of additional finance in the future.  

The consolidated financial statements have been prepared on a going concern basis. The directors consider the going concern basis to be appropriate based on cash flow forecasts and projections and current levels of commitments, cash and cash equivalents.

                  CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

REPORT OF THE DIRECTORS

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

Financial Risk management

The Group's operations expose it to financial risks that include credit risk, liquidity risk, and market risks. The Group does not have any debt and is not therefore required to use derivative financial instruments to manage interest rate costs nor is hedge accounting applied.

1.     Credit risk

Credit risk is the risk of financial loss to the Group if a customer or counterparty to a financial instrument fails to meet its contractual obligations, and arises principally from the Group's receivables from customers and investment securities.

The Group and the Company's financial assets comprise receivables and cash and cash equivalents. The credit risk on cash and cash equivalents is limited because the counterparties are banks with high credit-ratings assigned by international credit rating agencies. The credit risk on trade and other receivables is limited to the Group's receivable of £93,965. The exposure of the Group and the Company to credit risk arises from default of its counterparty, with maximum exposure equal to the carrying amount of cash and cash equivalents in the Group's Statement of Financial Position. The Group does not have any significant credit risk exposure to any single counterparty or any group of counterparties having similar characteristics. The Group defines counterparties as having similar characteristics if they are connected entities.

The Group does not hold any collateral as security.

2.     Liquidity risk

Liquidity risk is the risk that the Group will not be able to meet its financial obligations as they fall due.  The Group's approach to managing liquidity is to ensure, as far as possible, that it will always have sufficient liquidity to meet its liabilities when due, under both normal and stressed conditions, without incurring unacceptable losses or risking damage to the group's reputation.

 

To ensure liquidity, the Group maintains sufficient cash and cash equivalents on demand to meet its obligations as and when they fall due.  The Group actively manages its working finance to ensure that sufficient funds exist for operations and planned expansion.

 

3.      Market risks

Market risk is the risk that changes in market prices, such as foreign exchange rates, interest rates and equity prices will affect the Group's income or the value of its holdings of financial instrument.  The objective of market risk management is to manage and control market risk exposures within acceptable parameters, while optimising return on risk.

 

(i)            Pricing and risks

 

The directors consider there to be minimal price risk to the business. The Group however does have an unlisted equity investment whose price is exposed to market factors and realisation of which is dependant on the existence of willing buyers and therefore beyond the Group's control.

 

(ii)           Interest rate cash flow risk

 

The Group does not have interest bearing liabilities. Interest bearing assets are only cash balances that earn interest at a floating rate.

(iii)         Foreign exchange risk

 

The Group principally operates in US Dollars. The directors believe that the contracts for transfers of funds to Central America are so small, that there would be no benefit gained from hedging these contracts in the market. As such currency is bought at the spot rates prevailing on the days transfers are to take place. This situation is monitored on a regular basis. 

 

 

              CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

REPORT OF THE DIRECTORS

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

 

Financial Risk management - continued

 

4.      Capital risk management

 

The Group manages its capital to ensure that entities within the Group will be able to continue individually as going concerns, while maximising the return to Shareholders through the optimisation of debt and equity balances. The Group manages its capital structure and makes adjustments to it, in the light of changes in economic conditions. To maintain or adjust its capital structure, the Group may adjust or issue new shares or raise debt. No changes were made in the objectives, policies or processes during the years ended 31 December 2011 and 31 December 2010. The capital structure of the Group consists of equity attributable to equity holders of the parent, comprising issued capital, reserves and retained losses as disclosed in the Consolidated Statement of Changes in Equity.

Corporate governance

 

Corporate policies

 

Condor takes its health, safety, environmental and community responsibilities seriously, and has developed policies and systems to ensure that it explores in a safe, low impact and consultative manner, maximising the sustainability of its present and future operations for the benefit of all stakeholders.

 

Health and safety

 

Condor takes the health and safety of its employees and contractors seriously, and strives to exceed statutory obligations and achieve best practice. To this end, a new safety management system has been implemented for its exploration operations.

 

Environment

 

Condor operates in strict adherence to local and Governmental standards with regard to environmental impact on the local community. This procedure includes pre-exploration checks and post-exploration remediation programs. Currently, no unfulfilled commitments exist to remediate land upon which the Company has conducted exploration work.

 

Community

 

Condor is committed to working consultatively and co-operatively within the communities in which it operates, which includes local subsistence farmers and pastoralists and firmly believes that future mining operations should be to the benefit of all. To this end, Condor personnel participate in cultural awareness programs and have forged close ties with landholders and maintain a constructive dialogue with the Department of Environment and local community representatives. Condor is also a sponsor of many community development and aid programs currently in place including the provision of clean water through drilling water wells, tree planting, the supply of school books and training of locals in both technical and non technical skills to assist their personal development.

 

Compliance with the UK Corporate Governance Code

 

The directors recognise the value of the UK Corporate Goverance Code ("the Code"), and whilst under AIM rules full compliance is not required, the directors believe that the company applies the recommendations insofar as is practicable and appropriate for a public company of its size.

              CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

REPORT OF THE DIRECTORS

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

 

Financial Risk management - continued

 

Board of directors

The board of directors at the year end comprised of one non-executive chairman and one non-executive director who qualifies as independent non-executive director as defined by the Code. The directors are of the opinion that the recommendations of the Code have been implemented to an appropriate level. The board, through the chairman and non executive directors, maintain regular contact with its advisers and public relations consultants in order to ensure that the board develops an understanding of the views of major shareholders about the company.

The board meets regularly throughout the year and met over 12 times during the year to 31 December 2011. The board is responsible for formulating, reviewing and approving the Group's strategy, financial activities and operating performance. Day-to-day management is devolved to the country manager who is charged with consulting with the board on all significant financial and operational matters. Consequently, decisions are made promptly and following consultation among directors concerned where necessary and appropriate.

All necessary information is supplied to the directors on a timely basis to enable them to discharge their duties effectively, and all directors have access to independent professional advice, at the Company's expense, as and when required.

The participation of both private and institutional investors at the Annual General Meeting is welcomed by the board.

Committees

Each of the following committees has its own terms of reference.

Audit committee

The Audit Committee comprises J Mellon (non-executive director) and R Davey (non-executive director). The committee meets at least twice a year, in regard to the audit work required and completed. 

All directors received a copy of the respective audit committee reports prior to these meetings and had an opportunity to comment. The meetings were attended by the auditors.

The chief financial officer and a representative of the external auditors are normally invited to attend meetings. Other directors or staff may be invited to attend, as considered beneficial by the committee.

The Audit Committee's primary responsibilities are to review the effectiveness of the Company's systems of internal control, to review with the external auditors the nature and scope of their audit and the results of the audit, and to evaluate and select external auditors.

Remuneration committee

 

The Remuneration Committee plans to meet at least twice in each year. Its members are J Mellon (non-executive director) and R Davey (non-executive director), both of whom were in attendance at the meetings since their appointment date.

The Group's policy is to remunerate senior executives fairly in such a manner as to facilitate the recruitment, retention and motivation of staff. The Remuneration Committee agrees with the board a framework for the remuneration of the chairman, the executive directors and the senior management of the Group. The principal objective of the committee is to ensure that members of the executive management of the company are provided incentives to encourage enhanced performance and are, in a fair and responsible manner, rewarded for their individual contributions to the success of the company. Non-executive fees are considered and agreed by the board as a whole.

 

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

REPORT OF THE DIRECTORS

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

Financial Risk management - continued

 

Service Contracts

The Company has service contracts with its non-executive directors.

The service contracts also provide that the directors and parties related to the directors are entitled to participate in the share option arrangements operated by the Company as well as consultancy payments.

Details of the contracts currently in place for directors and related parties are as follows:


Annual salary £'000

Consultancy payments £'000

Date of Contract

Unexpired term

Notice period

M L Child

100

50

13 July 2011

-

6 months

J Mellon

-

12

6 April 2011

-

6 months

R Davey

-

25

19 December 2011

-

3 months

 

Subject to the notice requirements described above, there is no provision in the service agreements for compensation to be payable on early termination of the contract.

Supplier payment policy

It is the Group's policy to pay suppliers in accordance with the terms of business agreed with them. The number of days' purchases outstanding for the group as at 31 December 2011 was 30 days (2010: 30 days).

Annual general meeting

Your attention is drawn to the Notice of Meeting enclosed with this report convening the Annual General Meeting of the company at 11a.m. on 25 June 2012 at the offices of Speechly Bircham; 6 New Street Square, London, EC4A 3LX. The Notice of Meeting sets out and explains the special and ordinary business to be conducted at the meeting.

Directors Insurance

During the year the Company paid £5,300 (2010: £9,453) in respect of Directors professional indemnity insurance.

         statement of directors' responsibilities

The directors are responsible for preparing the Directors' Report and the financial statements in accordance with applicable law and regulations.

Company law requires the directors to prepare financial statements for each financial year. Under that law the directors have elected to prepare the financial statements in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRSs') as adopted by the EU and applicable law.

Under company law the directors must not approve the financial statements unless they are satisfied that they give a true and fair view of the state of affairs of the company and the group and of the profit or loss of the group for that period. In preparing these financial statements, the directors are required to:

·      select suitable accounting policies and then apply them consistently;

·      make judgments and accounting estimates that are reasonable and prudent;

·      state whether applicable accounting standards have been followed, subject to any material departures disclosed and explained in the financial statements;

·      prepare the financial statements on the going concern basis unless it is inappropriate to presume that the company will continue in business.

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

REPORT OF THE DIRECTORS

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

         statement of directors' responsibilities (continued)

The directors are responsible for keeping adequate accounting records that are sufficient to show and explain the company's transactions and disclose with reasonable accuracy at any time the financial position of the company and enable them to ensure that the financial statements comply with the Companies Act 2006. They are also responsible for safeguarding the assets of the company and hence for taking reasonable steps for the prevention and detection of fraud and other irregularities.

They are further responsible for ensuring that the Report of the Directors and other information included in the Annual Report and Financial Statements is prepared in accordance with applicable law in the United Kingdom.

 

The maintenance and integrity of the Condor Resources PLC web site is the responsibility of the directors; the work carried out by the auditors does not involve the consideration of these matters and, accordingly, the auditors accept no responsibility for any changes that may have occurred in the accounts since they were initially presented on the website.

 

Legislation in the United Kingdom governing the preparation and dissemination of the accounts and the other information included in annual reports may differ from legislation in other jurisdictions.

 

         statement as to disclosure of information to auditors

So far as the directors are aware, there is no relevant audit information of which the group's auditors are unaware, and each director has taken all steps that he ought to have taken as a director in order to make himself aware of any relevant audit information and to establish that the Group's auditors are aware of that information.

         auditors

The auditors, Crowe Clark Whitehill LLP, will be proposed for re-appointment in accordance with Section 485 of the Companies Act 2006.

         on behalf of the board:

 

 

         M L Child

         Chairman

 

         Date: 1 June 2012

 

 

 

 

 

REPORT OF THE INDEPENDENT AUDITORS TO THE MEMBERS OF

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

 

We have audited the financial statements of Condor Resources Plc for the year ended 31 December 2011 which comprise the Group and Parent Company Statements of Financial Position, the Group Statement of Comprehensive Income, the Group and Parent Company Cash Flow Statements, the Group and Parent Company Statements of Changes in Equity and the related notes.  The financial reporting framework that has been applied in their preparation is applicable law and International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRSs) as adopted by the European Union and, as regards the parent company financial statements, as applied in accordance with the provisions of the Companies Act 2006.

 

 

 

Respective responsibilities of directors and auditors

 

As explained more fully in the Directors' Responsibilities Statement set out on page 22 and 23, the directors are responsible for the preparation of the financial statements and for being satisfied that they give a true and fair view.

 

 

Scope of the audit of the financial statements

An audit involves obtaining evidence about the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements sufficient to give reasonable assurance that the financial statements are free from material misstatement, whether caused by fraud or error. This includes an assessment of: whether the accounting policies are appropriate to the company's circumstances and have been consistently applied and adequately disclosed; the reasonableness of significant accounting estimates made by the directors; and the overall presentation of the financial statements.

In addition, we read all the financial and non-financial information in the Directors' Report and any other surround information to identify material inconsistencies with the audited financial statements. If we become aware of any apparent material misstatements or inconsistencies we consider the implications for our report

Opinion on the financial statements

 

In our opinion:

 

·     the financial statements give a true and fair view of the state of the group's and of the parent company's affairs as at 31 December 2011 and of the group's loss for the year then ended;

 

·     the group financial statements have been properly prepared in accordance with IFRSs as adopted by the European Union;

 

·     the parent company financial statements have been properly prepared in accordance with IFRSs as adopted by the European Union and as applied in accordance with the provisions of the Companies Act 2006; and

 

·     the financial statements have been prepared in accordance with the requirements of the Companies Act 2006.

 

Emphasis of matter - El Salvador assets

 

In forming our opinion on the financial statements, which is not modified, we have considered the adequacy of the disclosure made in notes 1, 10, 11 and 12 to the financial statements concerning the uncertainty arising from the present moratorium on processing of permits for mineral exploration and extraction in El Salvador.  As set out in note 1, if the necessary permit renewals are not granted this would result in impairment of the Group's intangible assets and the Company's investments in El Salvador in the future and such impairment would be material.

 

 

REPORT OF THE INDEPENDENT AUDITORS TO THE MEMBERS OF

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

 

Opinion on the other matters prescribed by the Companies Act 2006

 

In our opinion the information given in the Directors' Report for the financial year for which the financial statements are prepared is consistent with the financial statements.

 

Matters on which we are required to report by exception

 

We have nothing to report in respect of the following matters where the Companies Act 2006 requires us to report to you if, in our opinion:

 

·     adequate accounting records have not been kept by the parent company, or returns adequate for our audit have not been received from branches not visited by us; or

 

·     the parent company financial statements are not in agreement with the accounting records and returns; or

 

·     certain disclosures of directors' remuneration specified by law are not made; or

 

·     we have not received all the information and explanations we require for our audit.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Stephen Bullock (Senior statutory auditor)

For and on behalf of Crowe Clark Whitehill LLP (Statutory auditor)

St Bride's House

10 Salisbury Square

London

EC4Y 8EH

 

Date: 1 June 2012

 

 

 

 

Note: The maintenance and integrity of the Condor Resources Plc website is the responsibility of the directors.  The work carried out by the auditors does not involve consideration of these matters and accordingly the auditors accept no responsibility for any changes that may have occurred to the financial statements since they were originally presented on the website.   Legislation in the United Kingdom governing the preparation and dissemination of financial statements may differ

from legislation in other jurisdictions.

 

 

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

 


Notes

Year Ended

31.12.11


Year Ended

31.12.10

 



£


£

 

Revenue


-


-

 






 






 

Administrative expenses


(1,975,408)


(502,605)

 






 

Operating loss

5

(1, 975,408)


(502,605)

 






 

Finance income

4

3,401


960

 

 

Net loss on financial assets at fair value through profit and loss

 

 

 

-


 

(804,461)

 

Loss before income tax


(1,972,007)


(803,501)

 






 

Income tax expense

6

(140)


(4,342)

 






 

Loss for the year


(1,972,147)


(1,310,448)

 






 

Other comprehensive income:





 

Currency translation differences


12,404


111,096

 

Other comprehensive income/(loss) for the year


12,404


111,096

 






 

Total comprehensive loss for the year


(1,959,743)


(1,199,352)

 

 






 

 

Loss attributable to:





 

 

Non-controlling interest


(6,479)


-

 

 

Owners of the parent


(1,965,668)


(1,310,448)

 

 



(1, 972,147)


(1,199,352)

 

 






 

Total comprehensive loss attributable to:





 

 

Non-controlling interest


(6,479)


-

 

 

Owners of the parent


(1,953,264)


(1,199,352)

 

 



(1,959,743)


(1,199,352)

 






 

Loss per share expressed in pence per share:





 

Basic and diluted

8

(0.37)


(0.24)

 






 






 






 

 

 

 

 

 

The notes in pages 36 to 56 form an integral part of these financial statements

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL POSITION

AS AT 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

 

 


Notes

31.12.11


 31.12.10

 

 



£


£

 

 

ASSETS:

NON-CURRENT ASSETS

Property, plant and equipment

Intangible assets

 

 

9

10

 

 

59,321

7,064,914


 

 

39,930

4,877,835

 

 






 

 



7,124,235


4,917,765

 

 

CURRENT ASSETS





 

 

Trade and other receivables

Cash and cash equivalents

12

 

349,968

854,146


129,963

922,275

 

 






 

 



1,204,114


1,052,238

 

 






 

 

TOTAL ASSETS


8,328,349


5,970,003

 

 






 

 






 

 

 

CURRENT LIABILITIES

Trade and other payables

 

 

15

 

 

399,516


 

 

92,620

 

 






 

 






 

 

TOTAL LIABILITIES


399,516


92,620

 

 






 

 

NET CURRENT ASSETS


804,598


959,618

 

 






 

 

NET ASSETS


7,928,833


5,877,383

 

 






 

 






 

 






 

 

SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY

Called up share capital

Share premium

Legal reserves

Exchange difference reserve

Share options reserve

Retained earnings

 

16

 

5,583,451

10,000,846

71

764,104

618,840

(9,038,479)


 

4,922,618

7,259,179

71

751,700

163,215

(7,219,400)

 

 






 

 



7,928,833


5,877,383

 

 






 

 






 

 






 

 

TOTAL EQUITY ATTRIBUTABLE TO:





 

Non-controlling interest


(64,573)


-

 

Owners of the parent


7,993,406


5,877,383

 






 



7,928,833


5,877,383






 

 

The financial statement were approved and authorised for issue by the Board of directors on 1 June 2012 and were signed on its behalf by:

 

 

 

M L Child

Chairman

 

 

The notes in pages 36 to 56 form an integral part of these financial statements



CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN EQUITY

AS AT 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

 


Share Capital

Share premium

Legal reserve

Exchange difference reserve

Share option reserve

Retained earnings

Total

Non Controlling Interest

Total Equity


£

£

£

£

£

£

£

£

£

At 1 January 2010

4,717,118

7,149,141

71

779,501

198,253

(6,020,047)

6,824,037

-

6,824,037

Comprehensive income:










Loss for the year

-

-

-

-

-

(1,199,353)

(1,199,353)

-

(1,199,353)

Other comprehensive income:










Currency translation differences

 

-

 

-

 

-

 

(27,801)

 

-

 

-

 

(27,801)

 

-

 

(27,801)











Total comprehensive income

4,717,118

7,149,141

71

751,700

198,253

(7,219,400)

5,596,883

-

5,596,883











New shares issued

205,500

75,000

-

-

-

-

280,500

-

280,500

Share options lapsed

-

35,038

-

-

(35,038)

-

-

-

-











At 31 December 2010

4,922,618

7,259,179

71

751,700

163,215

(7,219,400)

5,877,383

-

5,877,383











Comprehensive income:










Loss for the year

-

-

-

-

-

(1,965,668)

(1, 965,668)

(6,479)

(1, 972,147)

Other comprehensive income:










Currency translation differences

 

-

 

-

 

-

 

12,404

 

-

 

-

 

12,404

 

-

 

12,404











Total comprehensive income

4,922,618

7,259,179

71

764,104

163,215

(9,185,068)

3,924,119

(6,479)

3,917.640











Prior year non controlling interest losses

-

-

-

-

-

58,094

58,094

(58,094)

-

New shares issued

660,833

2,741,667

-

-

-

-

3,402,500

-

3,402,500

Share based payment

-

-

-

-

608,693

-

608,693

-

608,693

Share options lapsed

-

-

-

-

(153,068)

153,068

-

-

-











At 31 December 2011

5,583,451

10,000,846

71

764,104

618,840

(8,973,906)

7,993,406

(64,573)

7,928,833

 

 

Share premium reserve represents the amounts subscribed for share capital in excess of the nominal value of the shares issued, net of cost of issue.

 

Legal reserve represents the El Salvadorian statutory reserve calculated on results declared.

 

The exchange difference reserve is a separate component of Shareholders' equity in which the exchange differences, arising from translation of the results and financial positions of foreign operations that are included in the Company's Consolidated Financial Statements, are reported.

 

The share option reserve represents the amount recognised in previous years and the current year relating to the share options granted under the Group's share option scheme.

 

Retained earnings represent the cumulative net gains and losses recognised in the consolidated income statement.

 

The notes in pages 34 to 56 form an integral part of these financial statements



CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

COMPANY STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL POSITION

AS AT 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

 


Notes

31.12.11


31.12.10



£


£

ASSETS:

NON-CURRENT ASSETS

Property, plant and equipment

Investments

Trade and other receivables

 

 

9

11

12

 

 

-

2,939,654

4,837,053

 


 

 

-

2,974,052

2,203,456



7,776,707


5,177,508

CURRENT ASSETS

Trade and other receivables

Financial assets at fair value through profit and loss

Cash and cash equivalents

 

12

13

 

 

24,964

-

753,777


 

10,962

-

911,957



778,741


922,919






TOTAL ASSETS


8,555,448


6,100,427






LIABILITIES:

CURRENT LIABILITIES

Trade and other payables

 

 

15

 

 

114,876


 

 

78,766






TOTAL LIABILITIES


114,876


78,766






NET CURRENT ASSETS


663,865


844,153






NET ASSETS


8,440,572


6,021,661











SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY

Called up share capital

Share premium

Share options reserve

Retained earnings

 

16

 

5,583,451

10,000,846

618,840

(7,762,565)


 

4,922,618

7,259,179

169,957

(6,330,093)






TOTAL EQUITY


8,440,572


6,021,661

 

 

 

The financial statements were approved and authorised for issue by the Board of directors on 1 June 2012 and were signed on its behalf by:

 

 

 

 

 

M L Child

Chairman

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The notes in pages 34 to 56 form an integral part of these financial statements

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

COMPANY STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN EQUITY

AS AT 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

 




  Share capital

Share premium

Share option reserve

Retained earnings

Total




£

£

£

£

£

Company








At 1 January 2010



4,717,118

7,149,141

210,096

(5,050,872)

7,025,483

Comprehensive income:








Loss for the period



-

-

-

(1,284,322)

(1,284,322)









Total comprehensive income



 

4,717,118

 

7,149,141

 

210,096

 

(6,335,194)

 

5,741,161









New shares issued

Share based payment

Share options lapsed

 



205,500

-

-

75,000

-

35,038

-

-

(40,139)

 

-

-

5,101

 

280,500

-

-

 

At 31 December 2010



4,922,618

7,259,179

169,957

(6,330,093)

6,021,661









Comprehensive income:








Loss for the period



-

-

-

(1,432,472)

(1,432,472)









Total comprehensive income



 

4,922,618

 

7,259,179

 

169,957

 

(7,762,565)

 

4,589,189









New shares issued

Share based payment

Share options lapsed



660,833

-

-

2,741,667

-

-

-

601,951

(153,068)

 

-

-

-

 

3,402,500

601,951

(153,068)

 

At 31 December 2011



5,583,451

10,000,846

618,840

(7,762,565)

8,440,572

 

 

Share premium reserve represents the amounts subscribed for share capital in excess of the nominal value of the shares issued, net of cost of issue.

 

The share option reserve represents the amount recognised in previous years and the current year relating to the share options granted under the Group's share option scheme.

 

Retained earnings represent the cumulative net gains and losses recognised in the Company's income statement.

 

 

The notes in pages 34 to 56 form an integral part of these financial statements

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

 



31.12.11


 31.12.10



£


£

Cash flows from operating activities

Loss before tax

Share based payment

Depreciation charges

Loss on sale of tangible fixed assets

Adjustment for disposal of financial assets at fair value through profit and loss

Impairment charge of intangible fixed assets

Reallocation of tangible fixed assets

Finance income


 

(1,972,007)

608,693

34,434

293,693

 

-

-

(13,558)

(3,401)


 

(1,199,352)

-

905

-

 

804,465

21,378

(581)

(960)



(1,052,146)


(374,145)











Decrease/(increase) in trade and other receivables

Decrease in trade and other payables

Income tax paid


(220,005)

306,896

(140)


(35,998)

15,794

-






Net cash absorbed in operating activities


(965,395)


(394,349)






Cash flows from investing activities

Purchase of tangible fixed assets

Purchase of intangible fixed assets

Sales of tangible fixed assets

Interest received


 

(42,657)

(2,463,624)

 

3,401


 

(7,750)

(215,078)

692,022

960






Net cash absorbed in investing activities


(2,502,880)


470,154






Cash flows from financing activities

Proceeds from share issue


 

3,402,500


 

280,500






Net cash from financing activities


3,402,500


280,500






(Decrease) / increase in cash and cash equivalents


(65,775)


360,647






Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year


922,275


657,583

Exchange losses on cash and bank


(2,354)


(91,613)






Cash and cash equivalents at end of year


854,146


922,275






 

 

 

 

 

 

The notes in pages 34 to 56 form an integral part of these financial statements



CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

COMPANY STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

 



Year Ended


Year Ended



31.12.11


 31.12.10



£


£

Cash flows from operating activities

Loss before tax

Share based payment

Share based payment to subsidiaries treated as investment

Historic share based payment to subsidiaries movement Depreciation charges

Loss on disposal of investments

Adjustment for net movement on disposal of financial assets at fair value through profit and loss

Finance income


 

(1,585,538)

608,693

(259,295)

(6,744)

-

293,693

 

-

(3,137)


 

(1,284,322)

-

 

 

905

-

 

804,463

(910)



(952,328)


(479,864)











Increase in trade and other receivables

Decrease in trade and other payables


(2,647,599)

36,110


(254,612)

20,064






Net cash absorbed in operating activities


(3,563,817)


(714,412)






Cash flows from investing activities

Interest received

Sale of tangible fixed assets


 

3,137

-


 

910

692,022






Net cash from investing activities


3,137


692,932






Cash flows from financing activities

Proceeds from share issue


 

3,402,500


 

280,500






Net cash from financing activities


3,402,500


280,500






(Decrease)/Increase in cash and cash equivalents


(158,180)


259,020

 






 

Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year


911,957


652,937






Cash and cash equivalents at end of year


753,777


911,957






 

 

 

 

 

The notes in pages 34 to 56 form an integral part of these financial statements

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

 

1.             ACCOUNTING POLICIES


General information


These consolidated financial statements are for Condor Resources Plc and its subsidiary undertakings.  The Company is a public company registered in England and Wales on 10 October 2005 and is listed on the AIM Market of the London Stock Exchange.  The address of its registered office is 6 New Street Square, London, EC4A 3LX.  The nature of the Group's operation is described in the Directors' report.



Functional and presentation currency


Items included in the financial statements of each of the Group's entities are measured using the currency of the primary economic environment in which the entity operates (the "Functional currency").  The consolidated financial statements are presented in British pounds ("£") which is the Company's presentation and functional currency.



Basis of preparation


These financial statements have been prepared in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS and IFRIC interpretations), as adopted by the European Union, and with those parts of the Companies Act 2006 applicable to companies reporting under IFRS.  The financial statements have been prepared under the historical cost convention except for the revaluation of certain financial instruments that are measured at fair value.

 

The operations of the Group are currently financed from funds which the Company has raised from shareholders.  The Group has not yet earned revenues and is still in the exploration phase of its business.  In common with many exploration companies, the Company raises finance for its exploration and appraisal activities in discrete tranches to finance its activities for limited periods only and further funding will be required from time to time to finance those activities. As referred to in Note 21, after the balance sheet date the Company secured further funding of £2,500,000 by way of a private placing of new shares.  The directors prepare and monitor cash flow projections based on different funding scenarios and make assumptions about the availability of additional finance in the future.  

 

The directors consider the going concern basis to be appropriate based on cash flow forecasts and projections and current levels of commitments, cash and cash equivalents.

 

The financial statements have been rounded to the nearest pound.


Interpretations and amendments to published standards effective in 2011

 

The following are the new IFRS and IFRIC interpretations and amendments to published standards effective in 2011 that are relevant to the Group:

 

IFRS Improvements re IFRS 5 (see detail below)

IAS 27 Consolidated and Separate Financial Statements

IFRS 3 Business Combinations

Amendments to IFRS 2 Group Cash-settled Share-based Payment Transactions

Improvements to IFRS (detail below)

 

The adoption of the above IFRS and IFRIC Interpretations did not result in any substantial changes to the Group's accounting policies nor any significant impact on these financial statements except for presentation and disclosures in the financial statements.

 

 

 

 

 

 

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

 

1.             ACCOUNTING POLICIES - continued

 

The following standards, amendments and interpretations were mandatory for the Group's accounting period, but are not relevant to the operations of the Group:

 

Amendments to IFRIC 9 and IAS 39 Embedded Derivatives

IAS 39 Financial Instruments: Recognition and Measurement (Amendment) - Eligible Hedged Items

IFRIC 17 Distributions of Non-cash Assets to Owners

IFRS 1 First- time Adoption of International Financial Reporting Standards (revised)

IFRIC 18 Transfers of Assets from Customers

Amendments to IFRS 1 Additional Exemptions for First-time Adopters

IFRIC 19 Extinguishing Financial Liabilities with Equity Instruments

IFRS 1 Amendment - Limited exemption from IFRS 7 Disclosures for first time adopters

Annual Improvements to IFRS


Interpretations and amendments accounting standards

 

The Group has not adopted the following IAS and IFRS and its interpretations that have been issued as at the date of this report but not yet effective:

 

 

Reference

 

 

 

Effective date (Annual periods beginning on or after)

 

IFRIC 14 (Amendment) Prepayments of a minimum funding requirement

01/01/2011

Revised IAS 24 Related Party Disclosures (Issued 4 November 2009)

01/01/2011

Annual Improvements to IFRS (detail below)

01/01/2011

IFRS 7 Amendments to Financial Instruments Disclosures

 

01/07/2011

 

The directors expect that the adoption of the above pronouncements will have no material impact on the financial statements in the period of initial application.

 

Basis of consolidation


The Group financial statements consolidate the accounts of its subsidiaries; Minerales Morazan S.A. De C.V., Condor S.A., La India Gold S.A. and Cerro Quiroz Gold S.A. under the acquisition method.  The financial statements of subsidiaries are included in the consolidated financial statements from the date that control commences until the date control ceases.  Cerro Quiroz Gold S.A. is currently dormant, with no previous trading activity.

 

Entities that the group has significant influence but are not subsidiaries or joint ventures are accounted for as associates.  The results and assets and liabilities of the associate were included in the consolidated accounts using the equity method of accounting.

 

All the Group's companies have 31 December as their year end. Consolidated financial statements are prepared using uniform accounting policies for like transactions.

 

Intercompany transactions, balances and unrealised gains on transactions between Group companies are eliminated.


Business combinations

 

On the acquisition of a subsidiary, fair values are attributed to the acquiree's identifiable assets, liabilities and contingent liabilities that meet the conditions necessary for recognition, on the basis of fair value at the acquisition date. Those mineral reserves and resources that are able to be reliably measured are recognised in the assessment of fair values on acquisition.

 

Where the cost of acquisition exceeds the values attributable to such net assets, the difference is treated as purchase goodwill. After initial recognition, goodwill is measured at cost less any accumulated impairment losses. Where the cost of acquisition is less than the value attributable to such net assets, the difference is treated as negative goodwill and is recognised immediately in the income statement.

 

 

 

 

 

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

 

1.             ACCOUNTING POLICIES - continued

 

 

Property, plant and equipment


Property, plant and equipment is stated at cost, or deemed cost less accumulated depreciation, and any recognised
impairment loss.


Depreciation is provided at the following annual rates in order to write off each asset over is estimated useful life.

Plant and machinery                               - 20% on cost
Fixtures and fittings                                - 50% on cost
Motor vehicles                                        - 25% on cost
Computer equipment                              - 50% on cost

Investments

 

Investments in subsidiaries are stated at cost less provision for any impairment in value.


Financial instruments

 

(a) Financial assets

Financial assets are classified as financial assets at fair value through profit and loss, loans and receivables, held-to-maturity financial assets, and available-for-sale financial assets, as appropriate. The Group determines the classification of its financial assets at recognition. Where financial assets are recognised initially, they are measured at fair value, plus, in the case of investments not at fair value through profit and loss, directly attributable transaction costs.

 

Financial assets are derecognised only when the contractual rights to the cash flows from the financial assets expire or the Group transfers substantially all risks and rewards of ownership.

 

Financial assets recognised in the statement of financial position as trade and other receivables are classified as loans and receivables. They are recognised initially at fair value and subsequently measured at amortised cost less impairment.

 

Cash and cash equivalents are also classified as loans and receivables. They are subsequently measured at amortised cost. Cash and cash equivalents include cash-in-hand and deposits held with banks.

 

Investments which are held for trading are accounted for at fair value through profit and loss. Investments are treated as held for trading if they are:

 

(i)   acquired or incurred principally for the purpose of selling or repurchasing in the near term;

 

(ii)  part of a portfolio of identified financial instruments that are managed together and for which there is evidence of a

      recent actual pattern of short-term profit-taking; or

 

(iii)  a derivative (except for derivatives that are designated as effective hedging instruments).

 

In addition, the Group classifies investments as financial assets at fair value through profit and loss where the investment eliminates or significantly reduces valuation or recognition inconsistencies that would otherwise arise from measuring financial assets or financial liabilities, or recognising gains and losses on them, on different bases.

 

The net gain or loss recognised in profit and loss incorporates any dividend or interest earned on the financial asset.

 

(b) Financial liabilities

Liabilities within the scope of IAS 39 are classified as financial liabilities at fair value through profit and loss or other liabilities, as appropriate.

 

A financial liability is derecognised when the obligation under the liability is discharged or cancelled or expires.

 

Financial liabilities included in trade and other payables are recognised initially at fair value and subsequently at amortised cost.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

 

1. ACCOUNTING POLICIES - continued

 

Taxation


Current taxes are based on the results shown in the financial statements and are calculated according to local tax
rules, using tax rates enacted or substantially enacted by the balance sheet date.


Deferred income tax is provided using the balance sheet method on temporary difference at the reporting date between the tax bases of assets and liabilities and their carrying amounts for financial reporting purposes.

 

Deferred income tax liabilities are recognised for all temporary differences, except:

 

·        Where the deferred income tax liability arises from the initial recognition of goodwill or of an asset or liability in a            transaction that is not a business combination and, at the time of the transaction , affects neither the accounting profit nor taxable profit; and

 

·      In respect of taxable temporary differences associated with investments in subsidiaries, associates and interests in joint ventures, where the timing of the reversal of the temporary differences can be controlled by the parent, investor or venturer and it is probable that the temporary differences will not reverse in the foreseeable future.

 

Deferred income tax assets are recognised for all deductible temporary differences, carry forward of unused tax credits and unused tax losses, to the extent that it is probable that taxable profit will be available against which the deductable temporary differences, and the carry forward of unused tax credits and unused tax losses can be utilised, except:

 

·      Where the deferred income tax asset relating to the deductable temporary difference arise from the initial recognition of an asset or liability in a transaction that is not a business combination and, at the time of the   transaction, affects neither the accounting profit nor taxable profit or loss

 

·      In respect of deductable temporary differences associated with investments in subsidiaries, associates and interests in joint ventures, deferred income tax assets are recognised only to the extent that is probable that the temporary differences will reverse in the foreseeable future and taxable profit will be available against which the temporary differences can be utilised.


Intangible assets - exploration costs, licences and minerals resources


Exploration expenditure comprises costs which are directly attributable to researching and analysing data.  Licences include the costs incurred in acquiring mineral rights and, the entry premiums paid to gain access to areas of interest.  Mineral resources include amounts paid to third parties to acquire interests in existing projects.


When it has been established that a mineral deposit has development potential, all costs (direct and applicable overheads) incurred in connection with the exploration and development of the mineral deposits are capitalised until either production commences or the project is not considered economically viable.

 

In the event of production commencing, exploration costs, licences and mineral resources are amortised through administrative expenses, over the expected life of the mineral reserves on a unit production basis. Other pre-trading expenses are written off as incurred.  For the purposes of impairment testing, intangible assets are allocated to specific projects with each licence reviewed annually. Where a project is abandoned or is considered to be of no further interest, the related costs are written off.

 

Foreign currencies

 

Assets and liabilities in foreign currencies are translated into sterling at the rates of exchange ruling at the balance sheet date.  Transactions in foreign currencies are translated into sterling at the rate of exchange ruling at the date of the transaction.  Exchange differences are taken into account in arriving at the operating result.

 

On consolidation of a foreign operation, assets and liabilities are translated at the balance sheet rates, income and expenses are translated at rates ruling at the transaction date.  All resulting exchange differences shall be recognised in other comprehensive income and accumulated in equity.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

 

1.             ACCOUNTING POLICIES - continued

 

Share based payments

 

The fair value of equity instruments granted to directors, employees and consultants is charged to the income statement with a corresponding increase in equity.  The fair value of share options is measured at grant date, using the Black-Scholes model, and spread over the period during which the employee becomes unconditionally entitled to the award.  The charge is adjusted to reflect the number of shares or options that vest, except where forfeiture is due to criteria, as stated in the share option agreements.

 

Revenue recognition

Revenue is recognised to the extent that it is probable that the economic benefits will flow to the Group and the revenue can be reliably measured. Revenue is measured at the fair value of the consideration received, excluding discounts, rebates, and sales taxes or duty. The Group assesses its revenue arrangements against specific criteria in order to determine if it is acting as principal or agent. The Group has concluded that it is acting as a principal in all of its revenue arrangements.

 

Revenue from the sale of goods is recognised when the significant risks and rewards of ownership have been transferred, which is considered to occur when title passes to the customer. This generally occurs when product is physically transferred onto a vessel, train, conveyor or other delivery mechanisms. Revenue is measured at the fair value of the consideration received or receivable.

 

The following criteria are also met in specific revenue transactions:

 

Gold bullion sales

 

Revenue from gold bullion sales is brought to account when the significant risks and rewards of ownership have transferred to the buyer and selling prices are known or can reasonably be estimated.

 

Recognition of sales revenue for these commodities is based on the most recently determined spot price at the date of shipment, with a subsequent adjustment made upon final determination and presented as part of "Other Income".

 

The terms of gold bullion contracts with third parties contain provisional pricing arrangements whereby the selling price for gold bullion is based on prevailing spot prices on a specific future date after shipment to the customer (the "quotation period"). Adjustment to the sales price occur based on movements in quoted market prices up to the date of final settlement. The period between provisional invoicing and final settlement can be between one and six months.

 

The provisionally priced sales of gold bullion contain an embedded derivative, which is required to be separated from the host contract for accounting purposes. The host contract is the sale of gold bullion and the embedded derivative is the forward contract for which the provisional sale is subsequently adjusted. Accordingly the embedded derivative, which does not qualify for hedge accounting, is recognised at fair value, with subsequent changes in the fair value recognised in the statement of comprehensive income each period until final settlement, and presented as "Other Income". Changes in fair value over the quotation period and up until final settlement are estimated by reference to forward market prices for gold bullion.

 

Gold and silver in concentrate sales

 

Contract terms for the Group's sale of gold and silver in concentrate (metal in concentrate) allow for a price adjustment based on final assay results of the metal in concentrate by the customer to determine the content. Recognition of sales revenue for these commodities is based on the most recently determined estimate of metal in concentrate (based on initial assay results) and the spot price at the date of shipment, with a subsequent adjustment made upon final determination and presented as part of "Other Income".

 

The terms of metal in concentrate sales contracts with third parties contain provisional pricing arrangements whereby the selling price for metal in concentrate is based on prevailing spot prices on a specific future date after shipment to the customer (the "quotation period"). Adjustment to the sales price occur based on movements in quoted market prices up to the date of final settlement. The period between provisional invoicing and final settlement can be between one and six months.

 

The provisionally priced sales of metal in concentrate contain an embedded derivative, which is required to be separated from the host contract for accounting purposes. The host contract is the sale of metals in concentrate and the embedded derivative is the forward contract for which the provisional sale is subsequently adjusted. Accordingly the embedded derivative, which does not qualify for hedge accounting, is recognised at fair value, with subsequent changes in the fair value recognised in the statement of comprehensive income each period until final settlement, and presented as "Other Income". Changes in fair value over the quotation period and up until final settlement are estimated by reference to forward market prices for gold and copper.



CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

 

1.             ACCOUNTING POLICIES - continued

 

Interest revenue

 

Interest revenue is recognised as it accrues, using the effective interest rate method (EIR).

 

Critical accounting estimates and judgements

 

The preparation of financial information in conformity with generally accepted accounting standards requires management to make estimates and judgements that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities as well as the disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the balance sheet date and the reported amounts of income and expenses during the reporting period.

 

In the process of applying the Group's accounting policies, which are described in note 1, management has made the following assumptions that have the most significant effect on the amounts recognised in the financial information:

a) Impairment of intangible assets and investment in subsidiaries


The Group tests annually for impairment or more frequently if there are indications that the intangible assets and/or investments might be impaired.

 

Determining whether the intangible assets and/or investments are impaired requires an estimation of the value in use of the cash generating units to which the intangible assets belong to.  The value in use calculation requires the Group to estimate the future cash flows expected to arise from the cash-generating unit and the suitable discount rate in order to calculate the present value.

 

In particular, the present moratorium on processing applications for mineral exploration and extraction in El Salvador gives rise to a critical judgement in preparing the financial statements.  The factors considered by the Board in arriving at its judgement in relation to El Salvador are set out in note 10, 11 and 12.  If necessary permit renewals are not granted this would result in impairment of the Group's intangible assets and the Company's investments and loans in El Salvador in the future and such impairment would be material.

 

The situation in relation to the moratorium in El Salvador continues to be closely monitored on an ongoing basis by the directors in the light of local intelligence.

 

b) Share based payments

 

The Group has made awards of options on its un-issued share capital to certain directors and employees as part of their remuneration package.

 

The valuation of these options involved making a number of critical estimates relating to price volatility, future dividend yields, expected life of the options and interest rates.  These assumptions are described in more detail in note 19.

 

Classes of equity and reserves

 

Called up share capital represents the nominal value of share in issue at the reporting date.

 

Share premium reserve represents the amounts subscribed for share capital in excess of the nominal value of the shares issued, net of cost of issue.

 

Legal reserve represents the El Salvadorian statutory reserve calculated on results declared.

 

The exchange difference reserve is a separate component of Shareholders' equity in which the exchange differences, arising from translation of the results and financial positions of foreign operations that are included in the Company's Consolidated Financial Statements, are reported.

 

The share option reserve represents the amount recognised in previous years and the current year relating to the share options granted under the Group's share option scheme.

 

Retained earnings represent the cumulative net gains and losses recognised in the consolidated income statement.

 

2.             REVENUE AND SEGMENTAL REPORTING



The Groups operating segments have been determined based on geographical areas.

 

The Groups operations are located in UK, El Salvador and Nicaragua. The Group undertakes only one business activity as described in the Director's Report.

 

 

 

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

 

2.             REVENUE AND SEGMENTAL REPORTING - continued

 

Revenue and results

 

All transactions between each reportable segment are accounted for using the same accounting policies as the Group uses, as set out in note 1.

 

The segment results are the measures that are reported to the Groups' chairman in order to assess the segments' performance during the period.

               

The Group has not generated revenue during the year.

 

The Group's results by reportable segment for the year ended 31 December 2011 are as follows:

 


UK

£


El Salvador

£


Nicaragua

£


Consolidation

£

RESULTS








Operating loss

1,588,675


65,057


321,697


1,975,408









Interest income

3,137


264


-


3,401









Income tax expense

-


-


140


140









 

Assets

 

All transactions between each reportable segment are accounted for using the same accounting policies as the Group uses, as set out in note 1.

 


UK

£


El Salvador

£


Nicaragua

£


Consolidation

£

ASSETS








Total assets

778,741


4,394,293


3,155,315


8,328,349

 

 

 

 

 

 


UK

£


El Salvador

£


Nicaragua

£


Consolidation

£

LIABILITIES








Total liabilities

114,876


4,461


280,179


399,516

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Group had intercompany debt owed to the UK at 31 December 2011 split segmentally as follows:

Due from El Salvador              £2,392,329

Due from Nicaragua                £2,444,724

 

 

 



CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

 

2.             REVENUE AND SEGMENTAL REPORTING - continued

 

The Group's results by reportable segment for the year ended 31 December 2010 are as follows:

 


UK

£


El Salvador

£


Nicaragua

£


Consolidation

£

RESULTS








Operating (profit)/loss

496,670


-


5,935


502,605









Interest income

910


50


-


960

 

Net gain/(loss) from fair value adjustment on financial assets

 

 

(804,461)


 

 

-


 

 

-


 

 

(804,461)









Income tax expense

-


-


4,342


4,342









Included in operating loss








Depreciation

905


-


-


905

 

Assets

 

All transactions between each reportable segment are accounted for using the same accounting policies as the Group uses, as set out in note 1.

 


UK

£


El Salvador

£


Nicaragua

£


Consolidation

£

ASSETS








Total assets

922,919


4,707,220


371,406


5,970,003

 

 


UK

£


El Salvador

£


Nicaragua

£


Consolidation

£

LIABILITIES








Total liabilities

78,767


3,007


10,849


92,620

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Group had intercompany debt owed to the UK at 31 December 2010 split segmentally as follows:

Due from El Salvador              £1,869,095

Due from Nicaragua                £1,858,808

 

 

3.            STAFF COSTS


31.12.11


31.12.10


£


£

Wages and salaries

Social security costs

253,095

6,784


77,495

801


Staff costs included within additions to exploration costs during the year were £194,095 (2010: £53,495).


The average monthly number of Group and Company employees during the year were as follows:

 


Group


Company


2011


2010


2011


2010









Directors

Employees

3

111


2

12


3

-


3

-


114


14


3


3

 

 

Directors remuneration, which form part of key management personal is described below.  There are no other key management personal in the opinion of the directors.

 



CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

 

3.           STAFF COSTS - continued

 


 

Salary Payments

 

Termination Payment

 

Related Party Payments *

 

 

Total


2011

2010

2011

2010

2011

2010

2011

2010


£

£

£

£

£

£

£

£

M L Child

N Ferguson

K P Eckhof

J Mellon

56,000

-

3,000

9,000

12,000-12,000

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

75,400

-

3,500

-

116,325

-

6,000

-

56,000

-

6,500

9,000

122,325

-

18,000

-

Total

68,000

24,000

-

-

78,900

122,325

140,325

140,325

 

                * Refer to note 18 for listing of related parties


The Company has adopted a discretionary bonus scheme by which bonuses are paid to directors, employees and consultants and used by the recipients to subscribe for new Ordinary Shares at market value.  A total of up to 15 percent of the total share capital in issue from time to time will be made available for this purpose without the Board having first obtained the consent of the Shareholders.  The amount of any bonus payable under this scheme will be subject to approval by the remuneration committee.  At the year end no bonuses were paid.

 

No share options have been exercised by the directors.


The interests of the directors in options to subscribe for ordinary shares of the Company were:

 


Exercise price (p)

Latest exercise date

As at 1 January 2011

Granted during the year

Exercised in the year

 Lapsed in the year

As at 31 December 2011

DIRECTORS
















M L Child

 

 

K P Eckhof

 

J Mellon

15

1

9

15

1

9

30 May 2011

23 Dec 2013

15 Apr 2016

30 May 2011

23 Dec 2013

15 Apr 2016

1,250,000

9,000,000

-

1,750,000

3,000,000

-

-

-

5,000,000

-

-

5,000,000

-

-

-

-

3,000,000

-

1,250,000

-

-

1,750,000

-

-

-

9,000,000

5,000,000

-

3,000,000

5,000,000









 

The options all have a life of five years from the date they were issued. The exercise price varies dependent on the date of issue.

 

There are no vesting conditions attached to these options. However, if the individual's engagement with the company is terminated, the options lapse within 30 days.

 

The market price of the shares at 31 December 2011 was 6.87p (2010 10.75p).

 

The market price during the year ranged from 4.14p to 11.00p (2010 0.37p to 10.75p).

 

The interests of the directors in warrants to subscribe for ordinary shares of the company were:


Exercise price (p)

Latest exercise date

As at 1 January 2011

Granted during the year

Exercised / Lapsed in the year

As at 31 December 2011

DIRECTORS







M L Child

1

10 July 2011

13,750,000

-

13,750,000

-


1.5

10 July 2011

5,000,000

-

5,000,000

-

2

10 July 2011

5,000,000

-

5,000,000

-

 

 

4.            FINANCE INCOME


31.12.11


31.12.10


£


£





Deposit account interest

3,401


960

 

 

 

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

5.            LOSS BEFORE TAX

 

The loss before tax is stated after charging:

 


31.12.11


31.12.10


£


£

Depreciation - owned assets

Fees payable to the company's auditor for the audit of the
company's annual accounts   

Fees payable to the company's auditor and its associates for other services:
  - Other services pursuant to legislation

Foreign exchange differences

Impairment of intangible assets

Rent - operating leases

-

 

19,248

 

-

31,067

-

10,757


905

 

22,000

 

2,350

111,096

(21,378)

7,239

 

 

6.            TAXATION

Analysis of the tax charge

31.12.11


31.12.10


£


£

Current tax:

Tax

 

140


 

4,342





Total tax charge in income statement

140


4,342

               
                Reconciliation of the tax charge


31.12.11


31.12.10


£


£

Loss before tax

(1,972,007)


(803,501)





Loss before tax multiplied by standard rate of

Corporation tax in the UK of 21% (2010: 21%)

 

(372,560)


 

(168,735)





Effects of:

Non-taxation income/(non-deductable expenses)

Deferred tax not provided

 

(7,717)

380,277


 

(21,852)

187,491 

Differences in overseas taxation rates

-


3,096





Total tax charge in income statement

-


-


A deferred tax asset has not been recognised in respect of deductible temporary differences relating to certain
losses carried forward at the year end, as there is insufficient evidence that taxable profits will be available in
the foreseeable future against which the deductible temporary difference can be utilised. The unrecognised deferred tax asset was £1.8 million (2010: £1.4million).

 

7.             LOSS OF PARENT COMPANY

 

As permitted by Section 230 of the Companies Act 2006, the profit and loss account of the parent Company is not presented as part of these financial statements.  The parent Company's loss for the financial year was £1,432,472 (2010: £1,284,322).                   

 

8.                             LOSS PER SHARE

 

                Basic earnings per share is calculated by dividing the earnings attributable to ordinary shareholders by the weighted average number of ordinary shares outstanding during the period.

A reconciliation is set out below:


31.12.11


31.12.10

Basic EPS

£


£





 

Loss for the period

1,959,743


1,199,352

Weighted average number of shares

538,511,753


490,549,253





Loss per share (in pence)

(0.37)


(0.24)


In accordance with IAS 33 and as the Group has reported a loss for the year, the share options are anti-dilutive.

 

                CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

 

9.            PROPERTY, PLANT AND EQUIPMENT


Improvements to rental property


Plant & machinery


Fixtures & fittings


Motor vehicles


Computer equipment


 

Totals


£


£


£


£


£


£

Group
























Cost or valuation:

 











At 1 January 2010

-


13,683


19,443


38,199


42,844


114,169













Additions

906


-


-


6,557


287


7,750

Disposals

-


-


-


-


-


-

Reclassification

-


-


-


581


-


581

Exchange difference

-


372


481


809


763


2,425













At 31 December 2010

906


14,055


19,924


46,146


43,894


124,925













Additions

340


2,172


7,787


29,337


3,021


42,657

Disposals

-


-


-


-


(855)


(855)

Reclassification

(977)


-


-


14,535


-


13,558

Exchange difference

(69)


(229)


(611)


(2,584)


(1,305)


(4,798)













At 31 December 2011

200


15,998


27,100


87,434


44,755


175,487













Accumulated depreciation and impairment:

 











At 1 January 2010

-


(4,828)


(18,324)


(31,150)


(35,067)


(89,369)













Charge for period

-


2,678


718


1,208


1,586


6,190

Disposals

-


-


-


-


-


-

Reclassification

-


-


-


-


-


-

Exchange difference

-


(29)


(457)


(654)


(676)


(1,816)













At 31 December 2010

-


(2,179)


(18,063)


(30,596)


(34,157)


(84,995)













Charge for period

-


(14,085)


59


(17,075)


(3,333)


(34,434)

Disposals

-


-


-


-


855


855

Reclassification

-


2,714


191


1,108


(4,013)


-

Exchange difference

-


(1)


376


1,150


883


2,408













At 31 December 2011

-


(13,551)


(17,437)


(45,413)


(39,765)


(116,166)













Net Book Value:












At 31 December 2010

906


11,876


1,861


15,550


9,737


39,930













At 31 December 2011

200


2,447


9,663


42,021


4,990


59,321

 

The current year depreciation charge for the subsidiaries of £6,190 (2010: £24,153) is included within the addition to exploration costs in the year.

 

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

9.             PROPERTY, PLANT AND EQUIPMENT - continued

 

Company



Computer Equipment




£

Cost:




At 1 January 2010 and 1 January 2011



11,186





Disposals



-

At 31 December 2011



11,186





Depreciation:








At 1 January 2010



(10,281)

Charge for the year

Disposals



(905)

-





At 1 January 2011



(11,186)

Charge for the year



-

Disposals



-





At 31 December 2011



(11,186)





Net Book Value:




At 31 December 2010



-





Net book Value:




At 31 December 2011



-



 

 

 

 

 

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

10.          INTANGIBLE ASSETS



Exploration costs

£


Mineral resources

£


Licences

 

£


Total

£

Group
















Cost or valuation:








At 1 January 2010

3,487,375


3,600,443


472,036


7,559,854









Additions

215,078


19,698


-


234,776

Disposals

(19,698)


-


-


(19,698)

Exchange difference

56,107


-


-


56,107

At 31 December 2010

3,738,862


3,620,141


472,036


7,831,039









Additions

2,463,624


-


-


2,463,624

Disposals

-


(293,693)


-


(293,693)

Exchange difference

17,148


-


-


17,148

At 31 December 2011

6,219,634


3,326,448


472,036


10,018,118









Accumulated depreciation and impairment:








At 1 January 2010

Impairment for year

Exchange difference

(1,796,280)

(21,378)

-


(663,510)

-

-


(472,036)

-

-


(2,931,826)

(21,378)

-

At 1 January 2010

(1,817,658)


(663,510)


(472,036)


(2,953,204)









Impairment for year

-


-


-


-

At 31 December 2011

(1,817,658)


(663,510)


(472,036)


(2,953,204)









Net Book Value:








At 31 December 2010

1,921,204


2,956,631


-


4,877,835









At 31 December 2011

4,401,976


2,662,938


-


7,064,914

 


During the prior year the Group disposed of the Cerro Quiroz concession in Nicaragua by way of concession swap.  The Group received in return an 80% holding in La India Gold SA which holds two concessions in the La India province of Nicaragua, additionally the group received a 20% holding in Cerro Quiroz Gold SA, which now hold the concession for the Cerro Quiroz area.  This concession swap was completed on an open market basis, where in the Directors opinion the fair value of the disposed concession was at cost, which also fairly reflects the value of the acquired holdings.

 

During the current year the Group increased its' holding in La India Gold SA to 100%, the additional 20% holding was acquired at £nil cost as in line with certain conditions of the concession swap agreement in the prior year.

 

During the prior year, the depreciation policy in Nicaragua was revised to fall in line with local regulations, this led to a restatement of depreciation charges brought forward, and thus a devaluation of the exploration assets, shown as an impairment above.  This totalled £21,378.

 

During the year the Company donated 10% of its' stake in Minerales Morazan S.A. de C.V. to Condor Resources El Salvador Charitable Trust, a related Charity, set up for the prevention and relief of poverty in the Republic of El Salvador.

 

In assessing whether an impairment is required for the carrying value of an asset, its carrying value is compared with its recoverable amount. The recoverable amount is the higher of the asset's fair value less costs to sell and value in use. Given the nature of the Group's activities, information on the fair value of an asset is usually difficult to obtain unless negotiations with potential purchasers or similar transactions are taking place. Consequentially, unless indicated otherwise, the recoverable amount used in assessing the impairment charges described below is value in use. The group generally estimates value in use using a discounted cash flow model.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

10.        INTANGIBLE ASSETS (CONTINUED)

 

The calculation of value in use is most sensitive to the following assumptions:

·   Production volumes

·   Discount rates

·   Metal prices

·   Operating costs

 

In arriving at its assessment as to whether an impairment review is required in relation to its El Salvador assets, which amounted to £4,682,470 (2010 £4,682,470) at the balance sheet date, the following were considered in the context of the ongoing moratorium in that country;

 

a.       Whilst the Company's exploration licences in El Salvador are currently suspended as a result of the moratorium on mining activities they have not been revoked, nor have they expired.

b.      The Company has received assurances from a number of relevant government officials that it will maintain its concession areas following the outcome of the moratorium process.

c.       Exploration for and evaluation of mineral resources in the El Salvador project areas show excellent potential through additional drilling. The gold resource of 747,000 oz has the potential to double to 1.5m oz and the silver resource has the potential to increase from 22.4m oz to over 50m oz, which would be a large commercial reserve.

d.      The gold and silver price has increased significantly since the El Salvador projects were last drilled; and

e.       Condor remains committed to continuing its exploration and evaluation activities in the El Salvador project areas

f.       The directors consider the most likely outcome of the present moratorium will be a resumption of mining activities in El Salavador.

 

In light of the above, the Board does not consider the El Salvador exploration licences and related intangible assets to require impairment reviews, however care and maintenance expenditure in relation to the El Salvador projects is no longer capitalised.

 

In arriving at its assessment as to whether an impairment review is required in relation to its Nicaragua assets, which amounted to £2,679,744 at the balance sheet date, the following factors were considered:

 

The exploration assets are in good standing, substantive expenditure is planned on further exploration for and evaluation of mineral resources in Nicaragua project areas area, results from exploration for evaluation of mineral resources to date lead the directors to believe that the projects can be development into significant commercial reserves and sufficient data exists to indicate that the carrying amount of the exploration and evaluation asset is likely to be recovered in full from successful development or by sale.

 

In light of the above, the Board does not consider the Nicaragua exploration licences and related intangible assets to require impairment reviews and has continued to capitalise exploration expenditure in relation to those projects.

 

 

 

 

 

 

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

                FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

 

11.      INVESTMENTS

Company

Equity in subsidiary undertakings


Capital contribution


Total


£


£


£

Cost:






31 December 2009

3,606,021


11,843


3,617,864

Additions 2010

19,698


-


19,698







31 December 2010

3,625,719


11,843


3,637,562

Capital contribution relating to share based payment

-


259,295


259,295

Disposals 2011

(293,693)


-


(293,693)


3,330,026


271,138


3,603,164







At 31 December 2011

3,330,026


271,138


3,603,164







Impairment:






Charge at 1 January 2010

Charge for year

(663,510)

-


-

-


(663,510)

-







At 31 December 2010 and 31 December 2011

(663,510)


-


(663,510)







Net Book Value:






At 31 December 2010

2,962,209


11,843


2,974,052







At 31 December 2011

2,668,516


271,138


2,939,654

 

In assessing whether an impairment is required for the carrying value of an asset, reference has been made to the underlying intangible assets discussed in note 10.

 

The capital contribution relating to share based payments relates to 19,550,000 share options granted by the company to employees of a subsidiary undertaking in the group.  Refer to note 17 for further details on the group's share options.

 

 

The Company's investments at the balance sheet date in the share capital of companies include the following:

 

Name

Country of incorporation

Interest

%

Class of shares

Nature of the business

Share capital and reserves

Loss for the year






£

£








Minerales Morazan S.A. de C.V.

El Salvador

90

Ordinary

Gold and silver exploration

(596,592)

(15,650)








Condor S.A.

Nicaragua

100

Ordinary

Gold and silver exploration

(1,095,416)

(42,936)








La India Gold S.A.

Nicaragua

     100

Ordinary

Gold and silver exploration

(10,091)

(12,689)








Cerro Qurioz Gold S.A.

Nicaragua

     20

Ordinary

Gold and silver exploration

-

-








 

During the year the Company donated 10% of its' stake in Minerales Morazan S.A. de C.V. to Condor Resources El Salvador Charitable Trust, a related Charity, set up for the prevention and relief of poverty in the Republic of El Salvador.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

                FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

 

12.      TRADE AND OTHER RECEIVABLES

 


Group


Company


31.12.11


31.12.10


31.12.11


31.12.10


£


£


£


£

Current:

Other receivables

Prepayments

 

321,033

28,935


 

108,198

21,765


 

1,800

23,164


 

1,800

9,162










349,968


129,963


24,964


10,962

Non-current:

Amounts owed by Group undertakings

Provision

 

 

-

-


 

-

-


 

6,493,066

(1,656,013)


 

3,859,469

(1,656,013)


-


-


4,837,053


2,203,456










349,968


129,963


4,862,016


2,214,418

 

In assessing whether an impairment is required for the carrying value of an asset, reference has been made to the underlying intangible assets discussed in note 10.

 

  Designated at fair value through profit or loss at inception:

31.12.11


31.12.10

             

£


£

- Listed equity securities

-


-

 

13.      FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS


The Group uses financial instruments such as trade receivables and payables and other items that arise directly from its operations.  The main purpose of these financial instruments is to help finance the Group's operations.


A financial instrument is any contract that gives rise to both a financial asset of one enterprise and a financial liability or equity instrument of another enterprise.



 

 

 

 

 

The Group's financial instruments, which are recognised in the balance sheet, comprise financial assets at fair value recognised through profit and loss, cash and cash equivalents, receivables and payables.  The information about the extent and nature of these recognised financial instruments, including significant terms and conditions that may affect the amount, timing and certainty of future cash flows are disclosed in the respective notes below, where applicable.

The Group does not generally enter into derivative transactions (such as interest rate swaps and forward foreign currency contracts) and it is, and has been throughout the period under review, the Group's policy that no trading in financial instruments shall be undertaken.

 

There were no financial instruments not recognised in the balance sheet of the Company and the Group.

 

 

 

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

                FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

                                                                                    

 

13.        FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS - continued 

 

13.1      Financial instruments by category

               


Group


Company


31.12.11


31.12.10


31.12.11


31.12.10


£


£


£


£

Assets as per balance sheet
















Loans and receivables:








Other receivables

349,968


129,963


24,964


10,962

Cash and cash equivalents

854,146


922,275


753,777


911,957









Total

1,204,114


1,052,238


778,741


922,919

 

 


Group


Company


31.12.11


31.12.10


31.12.11


31.12.10


£


£


£


£

Liabilities as per balance sheet








Loans and receivables:








Trade and other payables

332,943


14,363


61,443


14,991

Accrued expenses

66,573


78,260


53,433


63,776









Total

399,516


92,623


114,876


78,766

 

The Directors consider the carrying value of the financial assets and liabilities to approximate their fair values.

 

14.2      Financial risk management objectives and policies


The Company's activities expose it to a variety of financial risks: currency risk, credit risk, liquidity risk and cash flow interest-rate risk.  These risks are limited by the Group's financial management policies and practices described below:

 

(a)     Foreign currency exchange risks

 

The Group does not hedge its foreign currencies. The directors believe that the contracts for transfers of funds to Central America are so small, there would be no benefit gained from hedging these contracts on the market. The situation is monitored on a regular basis. Transactions with vendors are mainly denominated in a number of currencies. Therefore the directors consider that the currency exposure arising from these transactions is not significant to the Group.

 

At present the Group does not have any formal policy for hedging against exchange exposure. The Group may, when necessary, enter into foreign currency forward contracts to hedge against exposure from currency fluctuations, however, the Group has not entered into any currency forward contracts to date.



The following significant exchange rates were applied during the year:


Average rate


Reporting date spot rate


2011


2010


2011


2010

USD 1

0.6250


0.6372


0.6416


0.6465

NIO 1

0.0274


0.0307


0.0278


0.0301

 

               

 

 

 

 

 

 

                CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

14.        FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS - continued 

 

14.2      Financial risk management objectives and policies


(b)     Credit risk


                As the Group had no turnover during the year; there is no significant concentration of credit risk.  The Group does not have written credit risk management policies or guidelines.


                The Group's cash is held in reputable banks.  The carrying amount of these financial assets represent the maximum credit exposure.

 

No collateral was held as security and other credit enhancements during the period. No financial assets are impaired or past due at the end of the reporting period.

 

(c)     Liquidity risks
         

To ensure liquidity, the Group maintains sufficient cash and cash equivalents to meet its obligations as and when they fall due.

(d)     Cash flow and fair value interest rate risks


                The Group has no interest-bearing liabilities.  Interest rates on bank deposits are based on the relevant national inter bank offered rates.  The Group has no fixed interest rate assets.

                The main financial risks for the Group are given on page 1 of the Directors' Report.

                At 31 December 2011 the currency and interest rate profile of the financial assets and liabilities of the Group was as follows:

 


31.12.11

31.12.10


£

Weighted average interest rate

£

Weighted average interest rate

Financial assets:





GBP - cash and cash equivalents

748,368

0.62%

348,277

0.62%

USD - cash and cash equivalents

99,878

1.42%

564,815

1.42%

NIO - cash and cash equivalents

5,900

0.00%

9,183

0.00%





Total

854,146


922,275


 

A decrease of 1% on the interest rates offered by the bank will result in a decrease in interest receivable of £5,639.

 

(e)     The Group prepares budgets and forecasts to project its future spend, and manages the capital available accordingly.

                               

 

 

 

 

 

 

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

 

15.    TRADE AND OTHER PAYABLES


Group


Company


31.12.11


31.12.10


31.12.11


31.12.10


£


£


£


£

Current:








Trade payables

273,226


14,363


59,443


14,991

Social security and other taxes

33,707


7,016


-


-

Other payables

2,000


-


2,000


-

Accrued expenses

90,583


71,241


53,433


63,776










399,516


92,620


114,876


78,767

 

No interest is charged on the trade payables.  The Company and the Group has financial risk management policies in place to ensure that all payables are paid within the credit time frame.  The Company has reviewed liquidity risk, and does not believe it is a material risk to the group.

 

16.           CALLED UP SHARE CAPITAL AND SHARE PREMIUM


Number of shares (thousands)


Ordinary shares

£


Share premium

£


Total

£

At 31 December 2009

471,712


4,717,118


7,149,141


11,866,259

Warrants/options issued/cancelled

-


-


35,038


35,038

Proceeds from shares issued

20,550

 


205,500


75,000


280,500

 

At 31 December 2010

492,262


4,922,618


7,259,179


12,181,797

 

Proceeds from shares issued

 

66,083


 

660,833

 


 

2,741,667


 

3,402,500

At 31 December 2011

558,345


5,583,451


10,000,846


12,584,296

 

The total authorised number of ordinary shares is 1,000,000,000 (2010: 1,000,000,000) with a par value of 1p. All issued shares are fully paid.

               

The company has one class of ordinary shares which carry no right to fixed income nor have any restrictions attached.



CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

 

17.           EQUITY-SETTLED SHARE OPTION SCHEME AND WARRANTS


a)   Share Options

The Company has established a share option scheme for Directors, employees and consultants to the Group.

 

The options all have a maximum life of five years from the date they were issued. The exercise price is dependent on the date of issue.

 

There are no vesting conditions attached to these options, however, if the individual's engagement with the company is terminated, the options lapse within 30 days.

 

Details of the share options outstanding during 2010 were as follows:

 

 

 

 

Date of Grant

 

 

1 January 2010 No. of shares

 

 

 

Issued in Year

 

 

 

Exercised in year

 

 

Forfeit or lapsed in year

 

 

31 December 2010

Date from which options are first exercisable

 

 

 

 

Lapse date

24/03/2006

6,950,000

-

-

-

6,950,000

31/05/2006

30/05/2011

31/05/2007

750,000

-

-

(750,000)

-

31/05/2007

31/05/2010

23/12/2008

17,900,000

-

(1,800,000)

-

16,100,000

31/05/2006

30/05/2011

10/09/2009

2,000,000

-

-

(2,000,000)

-

11/09/2009

09/09/2014

14/10/2009

1,000,000

-

(1,000,000)

-

-

15/10/2009

13/10/2014

31/12/2010

-

1,950,000



1,950,000




28,600,000

1,950,000

2,800,000

(2,750,000)

25,000,000



 

 

                Details of the share options outstanding during 2011 were as follows:

 

 

 

 

Date of Grant

 

 

1 January 2011 No. of shares

 

 

 

Issued in Year

 

 

 

Exercised in year

 

 

Forfeit or lapsed in year

 

 

31 December 2010

Date from which options are first exercisable

 

 

 

 

Lapse date

24/03/2006

6,950,000

-

-

(6,950,000)

-

31/05/2006

30/05/2011

23/12/2008

16,100,000

-

(3,000,000)

-

13,100,000

31/05/2006

30/05/2011

31/12/2010

1,950,000

-

-

-

1,950,000

01/01/2011

30/12/2015

15/04/2011

-

17,900,000

-

-

 17,900,000

16/04/2011

14/04/2015

15/08/2011

-

1,250,000

-

-

1,250,000

16/08/2011

14/08/2015

10/10/2011

-

400,000

-

-

400,000

11/10/2011

09/10/2015


25,000,000

19,550,000

(3,000,000)

(6,950,000)

34,600,000



 

The weighted average exercise price per share is 5.5p (2010: 1.36p) and the average contractual life is 4 years (2010: 2 years).  All the share options in issue are exercisable at the year end.

 

The estimated fair value of the options granted in 2011 was £1,116,182 (2010: £nil) and has been fully recognised within administration expenses, on a pro-rata basis over the vesting period.  This fair value has been calculated using the Black-Scholes option pricing model.  The inputs into the model were as follows:

 


2011


2010

Share price

Exercise price

Expected volatility

Expected life (yrs.)

Risk free rate

Expected dividend yield

6.87p

9p

129.38%

3

3.5%

-


10.75p

1p

109.52%

3

3.3%

-

               

A movement from the share option reserve of £455,625 (2010: £35,038) was made during the year reflecting the movements on issued warrants and options during the year.

 

Expected volatility was determined with reference to the historical volatility of the Company's share price.  The expected life used in the model has been adjusted, based on management's best estimate, for the effects of non-transferability, exercise restrictions and behavioural considerations.  The weighted average remaining contractual life of the share options outstanding at the end of the period is 2 years (2010: 1 year).

 

 

17.        EQUITY-SETTLED SHARE OPTION SCHEME AND WARRANTS - continued

 

b)  Warrants

 

During the previous year the Company issued warrants to its consultants for services provided.

 

The warrants all have a maximum life of two and a half years from the date they were issued.

 

Details of the warrants outstanding during 2011 were as follows:

 

 

 

 

Date of Grant

 

 

1 January 2011 No. of warrants

 

 

 

Issued in year

 

 

 

Exercised in year

 

 

Forfeit or lapsed in year

 

31 December 2011 No. of warrants

 

 

 

 

Lapse date

 

 

Price per share

14/01/2009

19,750,000

-

(19,750,000)

-

-

10/07/2011

1p

14/01/2009

5,000,000

-

(5,000,000)

-

-

10/07/2011

1.5p

14/01/2009

5,000,000

-

(5,000,000)

-

-

10/07/2011

2p


29,750,000

-

(29,750,000)

-

-











 

The estimated fair value of the warrants granted in 2011 was £nil (2010: £nil). This fair value has been calculated using the Black-Scholes option pricing model as detailed above.

 

 

18.        RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS

 

 During the year the Company received consultancy advice from the following related parties:

 

 

Company

 

 

Related party

 

31.12.11

£

 

31.12.10

£

Outstanding at year end

£

Iguana Resources Pty Ltd

K P  Eckhof

3,500

21,000

-

Burnbrae Limited

Axial Associates Limited

J Mellon

M L Child

9,000

75,400

-

122,325

-

-

 

During the year Axial Associates Ltd (a Company controlled by Mr M Child, Chairman) was paid an introductory fee of £90,000 for successfully raising £3,000,000 by way of a non brokered private placing of 33,333,333 new ordinary shares with a nominal value of £0.01 each at a price of 9 pence each with Macquarie Bank Limited.

 

All key management receives their remuneration from the subsidiary they work for.  The remuneration of key management in the subsidiaries is capitalised within exploration costs.

 

During the year the Company (Condor Resources Plc) loaned funds to its subsidiaries details of which are set out below:

 

 

Condor S.A.


 

31.12.11

£

 

31.12.10

£

Brought forward loan balance


331,841

151,744

Additional loans during the period


419,451

199,795

Transfer of assets


-

(19,698)

Closing balance


751,293

331,841

 

 

Minerales Morazan S.A.


31.12.11

£

31.12.10

£

Brought forward loan balance


1,869,095

1,816,731

Additional loans during the period


51,992

52,364

Closing balance


1,921,087

1,869,095

 

 

La India Gold S.A.


31.12.11

£

31.12.10

£

Brought forward loan balance


-

-

Additional loans during the period


2,164,673

-

Closing balance


2,164,673

-

 

 

 



CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

 

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2011

 

 

19.        OPERATING LEASES

 

The group has no operating lease commitments at the end of 2011 or 2010.

 

20.        CONTROLLING PARTY

   There is no ultimate controlling party.

 

21.        POST BALANCE SHEET EVENTS

 

On 23 February 2012 the Company announced that it had received written notification from the Minister of Energy and Mines in Nicaragua that the Minister had approved the transfer of the Espinito Mendoza Concession from Empresa Minera La Mestiza S.A. to Condor.  The approval of the transfer represented effective completion of the acquisition of the Espinito Mendoza Concession for total consideration of $1,625,000 to be satisfied by a combination of cash payments, $350,000 of which had been advanced at the balance sheet date, and the issue of new ordinary shares in the Company. In addition, by 24 August 2015 Condor will conduct a JORC-Code compliant mineral reserve estimation on the gold mineralisation contained in the Espinito Mendoza Concession and the vendor will be entitled to bonus payments equivalent to 1% of the JORC-Code compliant Proven and Probable reserve category at the gold price applicable at the time of the reserve estimation and of additional such reserves catalogued before 24 August 2016. As part of the payment arrangements on approval the Company issued 1,934,000 new ordinary shares fully paid at a price of 9 pence per share and made a further cash payment of $250,000.  At the date of approval of the financial statements the remaining consideration outstanding consists of three annual instalments each of $250,000 payable on 18 August 2012,18 August 2013 and 18 August 2014.  Of the total consideration payable of $1,625,000, an aggregate amount of $500,000 will be treated as being advanced by the Group to the vendor and is available for offset against any future bonus/es which may become due for payment under these arrangements.

 

Additionally since the period end the company has secured further funding of £2,500,000 by way of private placing of 50,000,000 new ordinary shares, to aid the company in focusing on providing a large commercial reserve on its 1,620,000oz gold resource at La India Project in Nicaragua.

 

 

Note:

 

The financial information set out above comprises non-statutory accounts.  The financial information for the year ended 31 December 2011 has been extracted from accounts for the year ended 31 December 2011 on which the report of the auditors was unqualified.

 

 

 

Appendix 2

 

Notice of AGM

 

Annual General Meeting

 

I am pleased to enclose the notice of our annual general meeting of the Company to be held at the offices of Speechly Bircham LLP, 6 New Street Square, London EC4A 3LX at [11] a.m. on 25 June 2012. I also enclose a proxy form and a copy of the Annual Report and Accounts of the Company for the financial year ended 31 December 2011. In addition to the ordinary business of the meeting, as set out in items 1 to 4 of the notice of meeting, there are a number of items of special business.

Resolution 5 allows the name of the Company to be changed to "Condor Gold plc".  This is proposed as there is a company with the same name, "Condor Resources Inc" listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange, which may cause confusion for people when using internet search engines in an attempt to locate the company website.  Following the definition of an independent JORC Code Mineral Resource of 1.7m oz gold in Nicaragua in December 2012, the proposed name change more accurately reflects the metal which is the core of the Company's exploration activity. If this is approved by Shareholders the Directors will consider an appropriate time to affect this change; it is intended that the TIDM remains CNR.

Resolution 6 allows for the consolidation of every twenty ordinary shares of £0.01 each into one ordinary share of £0.20. Where shareholders' individual holdings are not exactly divisible by twenty, the fractions of a share arising in their individual shareholdings will not be credited to them but will be aggregated and sold in the market for the benefit of the Company. 

The Company currently has a very large number of ordinary shares in issue and the Board believes that consolidation will result in a share price and nominal value more appropriate for the Company's size and therefore encourage investment.  The consolidation will not affect the aggregate nominal value of the issued share capital, which will remain at £6,102,791 and the overall market capitalisation of the Company should not be altered as a result of the consolidation. In addition, all Options issued by the Company will be rebased by a factor of 20 to be in line with the revised nominal value.

At the date of this notice there are 610,279,086 ordinary shares of £0.01 in issue.  The proposed consolidation would therefore result in 30,513,954 shares of £0.20 each with 3/10 of a share remaining.  To avoid a fraction of a share being in issue following the consolidation, an additional fourteen shares of £0.01 will be issued at par to the Company Secretary so that the total number of shares in issue is divisible by twenty.    

The aggregate nominal value of the issued share capital will therefore be £6,102,791 following the consolidation. 

The record date for the proposed consolidation will be the close of business on 25 June 2012.  The ordinary shares of £0.20 will be admitted to trading on AIM at 8.00am on 26 June 2012 and CREST accounts will be credited on 26 June 2012.  New share certificates will be posted to certificated holders. 

Resolutions 7 and 8 will allow your directors to allot relevant securities up to an aggregate amount of £5,000,000, representing 81.9% of the Company's issued share capital, without first offering them to shareholders. This proposal is made to allow the Board the flexibility to raise further funds for the Company, whether by way of placing with new or existing shareholders and/or rights offerings to existing shareholders, to ensure the business can fulfil its obligations and for normal corporate purposes.

I do hope you will be able to join me at the AGM.

Recommendation

The directors of the Company consider that all the proposals to be considered at the Annual General Meeting are in the best interests of the Company and its members as a whole and are most likely to promote the success of the Company for the benefit of its members as a whole. The directors unanimously recommend that you vote in favour of all the proposed resolutions as they intend to do in respect of their own beneficial holdings.

Yours sincerely

 

 

Mark Child

Chairman

 

                                                                                                                                                                                                                               

Condor Resources PLC. Registered in England and Wales No 5587987

Registered Office: 6 New Street Square, London EC4A 3LX

CONDOR RESOURCES PLC

(Incorporated in England as a limited company under the Companies Acts 1985 to 1989 with registered number 05587987)

NOTICE OF AN ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING

Notice is hereby given that the sixth annual general meeting of Condor Resources plc (the "Company") will be held on 25 June 2012 at the offices of Speechly Bircham LLP, 6 New Street Square, London EC4A 3LX at  11a.m. for the following purposes:

AGENDA

You will be asked to consider and vote on the resolutions below.

Ordinary business

1.                To receive the Company's annual accounts for the financial year ended 31 December 2011 and the reports of the directors and auditors thereon.

2.                To re-elect Mark Child as a director of the Company.

3.                To re-appoint Crowe Clark Whitehill LLP as auditors of the Company until the next AGM.

4.                To authorise the Directors to set the auditors' remuneration.

Special business

To consider and, if thought fit, to pass the following resolutions which, in the case of resolutions 5 and 8 are to be proposed as special resolutions and in the case of resolutions 6 and 7 are to be proposed as ordinary resolutions:

5.                That the name of the Company be changed to "Condor Gold Plc".

6.                That the directors be generally and unconditionally authorised for the purpose of section 618 of the Companies Act 2006 to consolidate and convert 610,279,100 ordinary shares of £0.01 each in the capital of the Company into 30,513,955 ordinary shares of £0.20 each.  Such shares shall have the same rights and be subject to the same restrictions (save as to nominal value) as the existing ordinary shares of £0.01 each in the capital of the Company as set out in the Company's Articles of Association for the time being. 

7.                That the directors be generally and unconditionally authorised for the purpose of Section 551 of the Companies Act 2006 (the Act) to exercise all powers of the Company to allot shares in the Company and to grant rights to subscribe for or convert any security into shares in the Company up to an aggregate nominal amount of £5,000,000 provided that this authority shall expire fifteen months from the date of passing this resolution, or if earlier, at the conclusion of the annual general meeting of the Company held in the year 2013 save that the Company may before such expiry make an offer or agreement which would or might require shares in the Company to be allotted, or rights to subscribe for or to convert any security into shares in the Company to be granted, after such expiry and the directors may allot shares in the Company or grant rights to subscribe for, or convert any security into, shares in the Company in pursuance of such offer or agreement as if this authority had not expired and so that this authority is in substitution for and shall replace all existing authorities given to the directors pursuant to Section 80 of the Companies Act 1985 or section 551 of the Act which, to the extent not exercised prior to the passing of this resolution, are hereby revoked.

8.                That, subject to the passing of resolution 7 and in place of all existing powers, the directors be empowered pursuant to Section 570 and 573 of the Act to allot equity securities (within the meaning of Section 560 of the Act) for cash pursuant to the authority conferred by resolution 7 as if Section 561(1) of the Act did not apply to such allotment provided that this power shall be limited to allotments of equity securities up to an aggregate nominal amount of £5,000,000, and shall expire fifteen months from the date of passing this resolution, or, if earlier, at the conclusion of the next annual general meeting of the Company held in the year 2013 save that the Company may before such expiry make an offer or agreement which would or might require equity securities to be allotted after such expiry and the directors may allot equity securities in pursuance of such offer or agreement as if this power had not expired and so that this power is in substitution for and shall replace all existing powers given to the directors pursuant to Section 95 of the Companies Act 1985 or Sections 570 or 573 of the Act which to the extent not exercised prior to the passing of this resolution, are hereby revoked.

 1 June 2012

On behalf of the Board

Mark Child

Chairman

Registered Office:

Condor Resources plc

6 New Street Square

London

EC4A 3LX

 

 

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Condor Gold (CNR)
UK 100