By BuyGold.Blog | May 14, 2026 | Category: Investor Education

Not all gold projects are created equal. A 1-million-ounce resource in Côte d’Ivoire is worth more than a 2-million-ounce resource in Mali. Grade matters. Jurisdiction matters. Management matters most.

Here is the 5-step framework professional investors use to value African gold projects. Use it before you write a check.


Step 1: Verify the Resource (NI 43-101 or JORC)

If a project does not have a technical report compliant with NI 43-101 (Canada) or JORC (Australia), it does not exist. Promotional press releases are not resources.

What to look for:

  • Measured & Indicated (M&I) ounces are real. Inferred ounces are educated guesses.
  • A project with 1Moz M&I is worth significantly more than 2Moz Inferred.

Red flag: “We expect to define a resource by Q4.” No. Show me the completed report.


Step 2: Grade is King

Grade drives economics. A high-grade project can be profitable at $1,200/oz. A low-grade project needs $2,000/oz.

Grade RangeCategoryComment
1.0-2.0 g/tLow gradeNeeds high volume, low costs, or both
2.0-4.0 g/tMedium gradeThe sweet spot for African open pits
4.0-8.0 g/tHigh gradeUnderground mining makes sense
8.0+ g/tExceptionalRare. Usually drives takeover offers

Example from our Project Pipeline: Kibali in DRC averages 3.4 g/t. That is world-class. Most exploration projects grade 1.5-2.5 g/t.


Step 3: Jurisdiction Risk (The Africa Factor)

A project in Senegal with 1.5 g/t may be more valuable than a project in Mali with 3.0 g/t. Stability matters.

Use this quick scorecard:

FactorGreen (Score 3)Yellow (Score 2)Red (Score 1)
Mining CodeStable for 10+ yearsRecent changesConstantly changing
SecurityLow riskSome riskActive conflict
InfrastructureRoads, power, portPartialNone
Track recordMultiple mines builtSome foreign investmentNo recent discoveries

Calculate total score: 9-12 = Low risk. 5-8 = Moderate risk. Below 5 = Only for experienced investors.


Step 4: Stage of Development

Earlier stage = higher risk = higher potential return.

StageRisk LevelTypical Valuation Multiple
ProductionLow0.8-1.2x NAV
ConstructionLow-Medium0.6-0.9x NAV
FeasibilityMedium0.4-0.7x NAV
PEAMedium-High0.2-0.4x NAV
ExplorationHigh0.1-0.3x NAV

NAV (Net Asset Value) is the discounted value of future cash flows. A project trading below 0.5x NAV is cheap—if the resource is real.


Step 5: Management Team

This is the hardest to quantify and the most important.

Ask three questions:

  1. Has this team built a mine before? If no, discount the project by 30%.
  2. Do they own shares? Management with skin in the game aligns incentives.
  3. Do they communicate clearly? Vague press releases hide bad news.

Putting It All Together: Two Hypothetical Projects

FactorProject A (Côte d’Ivoire)Project B (Mali)
Resource1.5Moz M&I3.0Moz M&I
Grade2.8 g/t1.9 g/t
Jurisdiction Score10/12 (Green)6/12 (Yellow-Red)
StageFeasibilityExploration
ManagementBuilt 2 mines beforeFirst project

Which is more valuable? Project A. Lower resource, but grade is better, jurisdiction is safer, and management has a track record. Smart investors pay a premium for certainty.


Your Next Step

The African Gold Project Pipeline 2026 post applies this framework to 12 real projects. Read it with this valuation guide in hand.

Then subscribe for the Weekly Deal Sheet to get new projects analyzed before they hit the market.


Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.

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