Dateline chairman backs US gold, rare earths push with $1.95M bet

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Murray Ward

June 26, 2026 — 12:38pm

When a company director puts their own cash on the line, it’s often seen as the ultimate vote of confidence in the business they steer. In the case of Dateline Resources, that vote just landed in the form of a massive $1.95 million cheque from its non-executive chairman, Mark Johnson.

The company says Mr Johnson exercised a parcel of 97.6 million listed options, with the cash heading directly into Dateline’s coffers and lifting his personal stake in the company to a significant 15.3 per cent.

Dateline Resources chairman Mark Johnson

The move appears to be a powerful signal from the boardroom, as Dateline pushes ahead with its impressive portfolio of gold and critical minerals projects in California. The timing is particularly noteworthy, coming after the company recently tabled a bankable feasibility study, or BFS, for its flagship Colosseum gold project in California that projected some seriously robust economics.

Released last month, the BFS for Colosseum is underpinned by a JORC-compliant mineral resource of 27.1 million tonnes grading 1.26 grams per tonne gold for 1.1 million ounces. The study outlined a high-margin gold project with a pre-tax net present value of US$785 million (A$1.14 billion) and a handsome pre-tax internal rate of return of 49.5 per cent.

Those numbers were based on a gold price of US$4200(A$6090) per ounce, which is slightly above current spot prices of US$4040(A$5855). However, the study’s high margins suggest it would likely remain profitable even at more conservative gold prices.

With such metrics on the table, Dateline has wasted little time moving the project towards the start line. It recently appointed Vancouver-based GenCap Mining Advisory to lead the project financing process and has also locked in project management consultants Alvarez & Marsal as its construction manager to deliver Colosseum on time and on budget.

But the story at Colosseum isn’t just about gold. The project is also considered prospective for heavy rare earth elements (HREE). It also strategically sits just 10 kilometres north of the giant Mountain Pass rare earths mine, the only scaled rare earths mining and processing operation in North America.

To put that in perspective, the adjacent Mountain Pass mine holds a hefty mineral resource of 49.7 million tonnes grading an impressive 6.68 per cent total rare earth elements (TREO). Dateline says it’s focused on the dual-commodity prize and has already kicked off drill testing at Colosseum for critical and strategic HREE’s such as dysprosium, terbium and yttrium.

Beyond Colosseum, Dateline has been busily consolidating its landholding at its Music Valley heavy rare earths project, also in California. The region is known to host HREE mineralisation from historical United States Geological Survey rock chip sampling, but it has never been subjected to modern exploration techniques. It appears to represent a significant blue-sky opportunity for the company.

Rounding out its American portfolio in California is the Argos strontium project, reportedly the largest strontium deposit in the United States and sits a mere 100 kilometres from Colosseum.

It’s one thing for a company to talk up its assets, but it’s another thing entirely for its chairman to put nearly A$2 million of his own money on the table. Mr Johnson’s sizable investment suggests the view from the top is that Dateline’s projects in the resource-rich grounds of California hold some serious promise.

With a high-margin gold project marching towards development and a budding rare earths story taking shape next to a world-class producer, his bet may just be a well-timed one.

Is your ASX-listed company doing something interesting?

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