 Today, I have the pleasure of speaking with Christopher Eccleston. How are you today, Christopher? I'm well. Thank you. Christopher, Christopher, we of course appreciate you as our European editor for Investor Intel but for our Investor Intel audience, you may or may not be familiar with the fact that Christopher is the founder and of course, Helgartening Company is your company and you just put out a research report on Chesapeake Goldcore. Yep. And can you just give us a bit of an overview on what Helgartening Company, what position you've taken with Chesapeake Gold? It must be a little like two years ago that I first encountered Chesapeake Gold. The interesting thing was not only the size of the asset but it was also the fact that I'd never heard of it before and that the company had at the time $35 million in the bank when virtually no one had anything. And since that time, it's been managed to husband that money so that it's still got most of it and it's come up now with a PFS, a revised PFS, which essentially shrinks down the enormous capex involved with such a gargantuan project and put it more in the price frame, I guess, of majors who also at this time are thinking economically, certainly much more economically than they did during the boom years. Okay. And something that I thought was interesting, they have now just renewed, well, they have a revised pre-feasibility study and they did one in 2013. Can you give us kind of the highlights on what the differences are between the previous PFS and the one they just announced? Well, it's the money phrase, you know, $4.3 billion in capex reduced to $1.9 billion in capex. That's the type of number that really catches the eye, particularly at this time when people want to see a smaller upfront outlay for a project and what they've done is they've shrunk the volumes going through the project from 120,000 tons per year to 90,000 tons per annum. And the effect of that is to reduce dramatically the capex. And they're sort of going to high grade at the start so that they maximize the revenues so that then they can plow the revenues back in to build the second half of the project to then sort of ramp up for what is expected to be something like a 27-year mine life. Of course, Chesapeake Gold is one of the largest undeveloped gold, silver and zinc projects in the world. There's just a handful of these on the planet. Can you tell us what makes them different from their competitors or what makes them kind of stand apart? Well, in fact, it's unique in that while you have some big North American gold projects and some with silver in the mix, small amount of silver, this has very large, in excess of 18 million ounces of gold, plus then the silver component and a very meaningful zinc component. And zinc, for those of you know me, I'm an unalloyed zinc fan since a long time and starting to look up a bit at the moment, it's certainly not a great level, but that component to this will certainly look better and better over the years. And that is unique in the Mataris project. All right. And I'm also interested in general. I mean, you are an esteemed mining strategist in our market. And we've had a lot of buzz happening during PDAC last week. And a lot of people were talking about what's going to happen with gold. Some have said we're looking at a bull market at the second half of 2016. I'd love to know what your thoughts are about the overall gold, silver and zinc market. Well, I think that the gold prices at a good place where it is at the moment might go up slightly from here, might not go up at all. I suspect that silver will go up a little bit. From here, I expect zinc to go up quite substantially. I wouldn't be surprised to see it end the year over a dollar. And of course, a dollar is the really out there number that Chesapeake are using in their model for the price of zinc. I would see silver from here, you know, maybe going up a dollar or two. And gold will probably doodle around in this area. You know, the great unknown is what happens on the international political stage. And that tends to drive the gold price. So we don't really know what will move it. But it's not going to go up to 1400 without some other impetus. And we don't know what that impetus would be at this point. Well, I know you do a tremendous amount of due diligence when you're doing a research report for Helgaard and Company with Chesapeake Gold. With reviewing the management team and board of directors, can you comment on the experience management team and or tell us anything else that was very interesting that you learned in this process? Well, I think the most relevant thing is the the nexus that Randy Rifle, the CEO brings between Gold Corp, where he's a member of the board, and Chesapeake Gold, because frankly, Chesapeake Gold looks tailor made to fill in a gap in Gold Corp's you know, production pipeline down the way. And of course, Gold Corp is also like a 9 percent shareholder in Chesapeake. So they're they're really in the catbird seat to eventually make a move on Chesapeake. And let's just say they've got a man on the inside or vice versa. So would you say this is a buy, sell or hold? It's definitely a buy at this stage. I mean, it's if you look at the the NPVs that are being talked about for the project, they're truly mind blowing. And the market cap is still derisory. I know I know the stocks moved up quite healthily over the last month or two. But it's not where it was. And certainly in light of the large cash store, it's not distressed in any means by any means. And it has this enormous resource. And now it has a PFS coming in a lot lower than the previous, you know, frankly, scary number that they had for CapEx. So it's it's certainly much more doable. Well, Christopher, thank you so much for joining us today. Thank you.