Gold's volatility may have rattled markets in 2026, but merger-and-acquisition activity in mining remains active — and one recent deal shows just how much value the market may still be missing in the junior space.
Last week, G Mining Ventures Corp. (OTC:GMINF) agreed to acquire G2 Goldfields Inc. (OTC:GUYGF) in an all-share transaction valued at approximately $2.2 billion. The deal combines two adjacent assets in Guyana — Oko West and Oko-Ghanie — into a single district-scale mining complex capable of producing more than 500,000 ounces of gold annually over its life.
"Once built, this mine has the potential to rank among the highest-producing gold mines globally," G Mining CEO Louis-Pierre Gignac said in the statement.
The logic behind the transaction is straightforward. By consolidating neighboring deposits into a single system, G Mining can eliminate redundant infrastructure, accelerate permitting, and improve capital efficiency. In practical terms, it translates into more than $1 billion in synergies and the elimination of standalone development costs for G2's project.
The deal may not be a headline magnet purely on size, but it offers a strong example of how large an acquisition premium a junior miner can command when the right conditions align.
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For Bastion Asset Management senior portfolio manager Michael Gentile, the broader takeaway is clear – gold ounces in the ground remain dramatically undervalued.
The G2 acquisition implies a valuation of roughly $618 per ounce — well above the $30 to $100 per ounce range where many junior miners still trade.
Still, in a Saturday morning note, Gentile argued that not all ounces deserve the same valuation. He outlined five key factors that determine whether a resource merits a premium:
- Probability of becoming a mine
- Gold price environment
- Grade, which drives margins
- Scale of the deposit
- Capital intensity and infrastructure requirements
That fifth factor is especially important in this transaction. By combining the two projects, G Mining effectively reduces G2's required capital expenditure to near zero, making its ounces materially more valuable. That logic helps explain how a buyer can justify paying $618 per ounce while still creating shareholder value.
The framework also offers a useful way to think about valuations across the broader junior mining sector.
Where The Discount Still Looks Wide
Radisson Mining Resources Inc. (OTC:RMRDF), one of Gentile's holdings, has a market capitalization of around $273 million. Using a conservative formula that applies a 50% penalty to inferred ounces — estimates based on more limited geological evidence — the valuation can be expressed as:
where enterprise value equals market capitalization plus debt minus cash.
Using that formula, Radisson's adjusted ounces imply a valuation of around $185 per ounce. The number is roughly 70% below the G2 transaction benchmark, despite a high-grade project with infrastructure, scale, a favorable location near mills, and management with a strong track record.
Benzinga's 2026 watchlist pick, Cassiar Gold Corp. (OTC:CGLCF), offers an even sharper example. The company has an enterprise value of around $53.7 million and 1.375 million adjusted ounces. It also has strong management and infrastructure already in place, including a road, an airstrip, a built camp, and a small permitted mill.
Yet Cassiar trades at just about $39 per ounce — more than 15 times below the G2 valuation.
Not every junior deserves a premium multiple, and transaction benchmarks do not automatically reset an entire sector. But if major and intermediate producers can justify paying more than $600 per ounce for strategically and infrastructure-advantaged assets, then a large part of the junior mining universe still appears materially undervalued.
As long as the gold price remains comfortably above the historic average all-in sustaining cost of roughly $1,600 per ounce as of 2025, that gap between market pricing and intrinsic value may not remain open indefinitely.
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