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Fortuna Mining Corp.

WATCH

TSX · Gold · Scored Apr 23, 2026

Composite Score 16/25
Management Skin-in-the-Game
3/5
Jorge Ganoza Durant, CEO and co-founder, has built Fortuna Mining (formerly Fortuna Silver Mines) from a single Peruvian silver operation into a diversified multi-jurisdiction gold-silver producer. Ganoza's execution at Séguéla (Ivory Coast) — brought from discovery to production in approximately four years — was a genuine operational achievement that demonstrated Fortuna's ability to construct and commission mines in challenging African jurisdictions. The CEO has meaningful insider ownership and has been the consistent driver of the company's expansion strategy.

Fortuna's portfolio complexity is both its strength and its challenge. Four producing mines across four countries (Ivory Coast, Burkina Faso, Mexico, Argentina) creates diversification but also management bandwidth risk. The Yaramoko mine in Burkina Faso has been significantly affected by the deteriorating security situation under the military junta government — Fortuna has disclosed operational challenges, temporary suspensions, and uncertainty about the long-term viability of Yaramoko under current conditions. This mirrors the broader industry experience in Burkina Faso, where multiple miners (Endeavour Mining, Semafo previously) have faced serious security and government challenges.

Score 3/5: Ganoza's execution at Séguéla is a genuine management positive. The Burkina Faso situation at Yaramoko is a significant management negative — either through poor jurisdiction assessment at acquisition time, or through inability to operate in a deteriorating security environment. The complexity of managing four mines in four countries with different regulatory frameworks moderates the overall score.
Project Geology Quality
4/5
Séguéla (Ivory Coast) is Fortuna's crown jewel — the Antenna deposit is a high-grade shear-hosted gold deposit in the Birimian Greenstone Belt, one of West Africa's most productive gold geological environments. Séguéla commenced production in 2023 and has been operating above guidance at approximately 200,000 oz/yr, with costs among the lowest in Fortuna's portfolio. The exploration potential around Antenna (multiple satellite targets on the Séguéla license) is significant and ongoing drilling continues to add resources.

San Jose (Oaxaca, Mexico) is a high-grade silver-gold underground mine that has been in production since 2011. The deposit is well-understood with a demonstrated ability to replace reserves through exploration. San Jose at $78/oz silver generates exceptional margins on its silver content. Lindero (Argentina) is a large gold deposit with reserves supporting 10+ years of open-pit production — not high-grade but bulk-mining at low strip ratios. Yaramoko (Burkina Faso, Séguéla neighboring permit) is impaired by security/political risk.

Score 4/5: Séguéla is genuinely world-class in production rate and grade for West Africa; San Jose is a solid high-grade silver-gold underground mine. Score is 4/5 rather than 5/5 because Yaramoko's operational impairment materially reduces the aggregate portfolio value, and Lindero's lower-grade bulk mining profile reduces overall portfolio quality.
Capital Structure Health
3/5
Fortuna's capital position is meaningfully impaired by Yaramoko's underperformance relative to plan. Yaramoko was expected to contribute approximately 80,000–100,000 oz/yr at competitive costs; security incidents and operational disruptions in Burkina Faso have reduced or interrupted that contribution. The lost cash flow from Yaramoko during disruption periods has created a gap in Fortuna's aggregate cash generation that must be covered by Séguéla and San Jose — both of which are strong, but a four-mine company losing one mine's contribution strains the capital plan.

At $4,800/oz gold and $78/oz silver, Séguéla alone (200,000 oz/yr at ~$900 AISC) generates approximately US$780M in annual operating cash flow — a transformational number for a company of Fortuna's market cap (~US$2B). San Jose adds further silver-leveraged cash flow. The balance sheet is manageable with the Séguéla cash machine running, but Lindero's open-pit operating costs and Yaramoko's instability create drag.

Score 3/5: strong cash generation from Séguéla and San Jose at spot prices, but Yaramoko impairment reduces confidence in aggregate cash flow projections. Not 4/5 because the Burkina Faso situation introduces genuine cash flow uncertainty that cannot be fully mitigated at the operating level.
Catalyst Proximity
3/5
Séguéla's ongoing production guidance and exploration updates (satellite deposits around Antenna) are the primary positive catalysts. Any resource addition from Séguéla's satellite targets could add meaningfully to mine life and future production — the Birimian Greenstone Belt has historically yielded district-scale gold endowment for systematic explorers. Fortuna has committed exploration capital to Séguéla satellite targets in 2025–2026.

Yaramoko's situation is the dominant catalyst risk: any further escalation of security incidents or government intervention in Burkina Faso could necessitate a temporary or permanent closure — a negative catalyst. Conversely, any stabilization of the Burkina Faso security environment could restore Yaramoko contributions and re-rate Fortuna's production multiple. San Jose continues to explore at depth, and any meaningful underground extension would be a positive catalyst for the Mexican silver-gold asset.

Score 3/5: Séguéla satellite exploration and San Jose depth extension are positive catalysts with moderate probability of near-term materialization. Yaramoko is a binary risk catalyst — either resolution or escalation — with uncertain timing. No near-term corporate catalyst (M&A, financing, major production milestone) beyond operational execution.
Comparable Acquisition Value
3/5
Fortuna Mining trades at approximately US$6–9/share × ~300M shares = US$1.8–2.7B market cap. At $4,800 gold and Séguéla producing 200,000 oz/yr at ~$900 AISC, the Séguéla asset alone generates ~$780M in annual operating cash flow — implying the entire company is trading at approximately 3–4x Séguéla's annual cash flow. This is an inexpensive multiple for a high-grade, low-cost West African gold mine operating at this scale.

However, the Yaramoko discount is real and should be applied: the market appropriately prices Yaramoko at a significant discount to its book value given Burkina Faso security risk. At a zero value for Yaramoko, the implied P/NAV for Séguéla + San Jose + Lindero is approximately 0.5–0.7x at spot prices — genuinely good value if you believe Séguéla will continue running at current rates. The Burkina Faso situation is the primary risk that keeps Fortuna from a higher acquisition score.

Score 3/5: good value on a Séguéla-ex-Yaramoko basis, but the Burkina Faso overhang creates binary risk that prevents a higher score. Investors who believe the Yaramoko situation will stabilize or who are comfortable treating it as zero may find Fortuna attractively priced at current levels.
Analyst Summary

Fortuna Mining scores 16/25 (WATCH), led by the exceptional Séguéla gold mine in Ivory Coast — genuinely one of West Africa's finest operating gold assets — offset by the Yaramoko (Burkina Faso) security and political risk that has impaired one of four mines and introduced binary risk into the production profile. At $4,800/oz gold and $78/oz silver, Séguéla and San Jose together generate exceptional cash flows; the question is whether Yaramoko's impairment resolves, persists, or escalates.

The strongest factors are geology (4/5: Séguéla world-class West African gold, San Jose solid Mexican silver-gold) and capital (3/5: strong at Séguéla, impaired by Yaramoko uncertainty). The weakest is management (3/5: Séguéla construction was excellent, but Yaramoko's Burkina Faso exposure is a negative for risk-adjusted capital allocation). CEO Ganoza's long-term track record and insider ownership are genuine positives.

For investors comfortable with West African jurisdictional risk, Fortuna offers attractive value on a Séguéla basis alone — the Burkina Faso discount makes the stock look cheap if you exclude Yaramoko. Monitor quarterly production at all four mines, any Burkina Faso security developments (government statements, industry-wide mine suspensions), and Séguéla satellite exploration drill results. The Séguéla satellite targets are the most value-creating near-term catalyst if successful.

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Company
Exchange / Ticker
TSX:FVI
Jurisdiction
Côte d'Ivoire
Primary Commodity
Gold
Website
https://fortunamining.com

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