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Pinnacle Silver and Gold Corp.

LiDAR, or Light Detection and Ranging, is a remote sensing technology that uses laser light to ‘see through’ vegetation and soil cover to measure distances, with 15-30 cm scale accuracy, to underlying rock surfaces.  In this way, it can map out features such as structures and lithological contacts that can be related to mineralization but may not be exposed at surface.  The survey also included colour aerial photography with 10-15 cm resolution that will assist in surface exploration and planning of infrastructure upgrades.

‘Although we have been able to follow and map out the Dos de Mayo vein system along strike for approximately 1,600 metres so far, our geologists are restricted by the amount of outcrop exposure ,’ stated Robert Archer, Pinnacle’s President & CEO.  ‘The LiDAR survey should allow us to ‘connect the dots’ along this structural trend and allow us to better define not only the main vein but parallel and splay veins nearby.  This knowledge, along with additional features such as flexures and fault offsets in the vein structures, will be crucial for interpreting the geological environment and planning the surface drill program.  In addition, LiDAR is known for its ability to detect subtle and sometimes buried features such as old mine workings, overgrown pits and trenches that could lead to the discovery of previously unknown mineralization.’

Qualified Person

Mr. Jorge Ortega, P. Geo, a Qualified Person as defined by National Instrument 43-101, and the author of the NI 43-101 Technical Report for the Potrero Project, has reviewed, verified and approved for disclosure the technical information contained in this news release.

About the Potrero Property

El Potrero is located in the prolific Sierra Madre Occidental of western Mexico and lies within 35 kilometres of four operating mines, including the 4,000 tonnes per day (tpd) Ciénega Mine (Fresnillo), the 1,000 tpd Tahuehueto Mine (Luca Mining) and the 250 tpd Topia Mine (Guanajuato Silver).

High-grade gold-silver mineralization occurs in a low sulphidation epithermal breccia vein system hosted within andesites of the Lower Volcanic Series and has three historic mines along a 500 metre strike length.  The property has been in private hands for almost 40 years and has never been systematically explored by modern methods, leaving significant exploration potential.

A previously operational 100 tpd plant on site can be refurbished / rebuilt and historic underground mine workings rehabilitated at relatively low cost in order to achieve near-term production once permits are in place. The property is road accessible with a power line within three kilometres.

Pinnacle will earn an initial 50% interest immediately upon commencing production.  The goal would then be to generate sufficient cash flow with which to further develop the project and increase the Company’s ownership to 100% subject to a 2% NSR.  If successful, this approach would be less dilutive for shareholders than relying on the equity markets to finance the growth of the Company.

About Pinnacle Silver and Gold Corp.

Pinnacle is focused on the development of precious metals projects in the Americas.  The high-grade Potrero gold-silver project in Mexico’s Sierra Madre Belt hosts an underexplored low-sulphidation epithermal vein system and provides the potential for near-term production . In the prolific Red Lake District of northwestern Ontario, the Company owns a 100% interest in the past-producing, high-grade Argosy Gold Mine and the adjacent North Birch Project with an eight-kilometre-long target horizon . With a seasoned, highly successful management team and quality projects, Pinnacle Silver and Gold is committed to building long -term , sustainable value for shareholders.

Signed: ‘Robert A. Archer’

President & CEO

For further information contact :

Email: info@pinnaclesilverandgold.com

Tel.:  +1 (877) 271-5886 ext. 110

Website: www.pinnaclesilverandgold.com

Neither the TSX Venture Exchange nor the Investment Industry Regulatory Organization of Canada accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release .

Copyright (c) 2025 TheNewswire – All rights reserved.

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U.K. Prime Minister Kier Starmer suggested Monday that the former Prince Andrew should testify in the U.S. investigation into Jeffrey Epstein.

Starmer made the comment to reporters while traveling to a G-20 summit in Johannesburg on Monday, though he declined to comment on the former prince’s case directly.

‘I don’t comment on his particular case,’’ Starmer said. ‘But as a general principle I’ve held for a very long time is that anybody who has got relevant information in relation to these kind of cases should give that evidence to those that need it.’’

Starmer’s comments come after the U.S. House Oversight Committee requested that he ex-royal, who is now known as Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, submit to a transcribed interview regarding his long relationship with Epstein. He has so far ignored the request.

Rep. Robert Garcia of California, the committee’s ranking Democrat, and Rep. Suhas Subramanyam, a Democrat from Virginia, accused the disgraced royal of trying to ‘hide’ from the investigation.

‘Our work will move forward with or without him, and we will hold anyone who was involved in these crimes accountable, no matter their wealth, status or political party,’ they said in a statement released on Friday. ‘We will get justice for the survivors.’

King Charles III formally removed the ‘Style, Titles and Honours of Prince Andrew’ in late October.

‘His lease on Royal Lodge has, to date, provided him with legal protection to continue in residence,’ Buckingham Palace announced in a statement. ‘Formal notice has now been served to surrender the lease, and he will move to alternative private accommodation.’

The palace said the censures ‘are deemed necessary, notwithstanding the fact that he continues to deny the allegations against him.’

Andrew announced Oct. 17 that he was relinquishing his Duke of York title after the publication of an unauthorized biography by British author Andrew Lownie, ‘Entitled: The Rise and Fall of the House of York,’ in August.

Fox News’ Alexandra Koch contributed to this report.


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Blackrock Silver Corp. (TSXV: BRC,OTC:BKRRF) (OTCQX: BKRRF) (FSE: AHZ0) (the ‘Company’ or ‘Blackrock’) is pleased to report that all resolutions proposed and voted on at the Annual General Meeting of its shareholders held on November 21, 2025, in Vancouver, British Columbia (the ‘Meeting’) were approved.

At the Meeting, shareholders of the Company: (i) approved the election of William (Bill) Howald, David Laing, Thomas (Tom) Peregoodoff, Andrew Pollard, Daniel Vickerman and Antony (Tony) Wood as directors of the Company; (ii) approved the appointment of the Company’s auditor, BDO Canada LLP, Chartered Professional Accountants, as the independent auditor of the Company and the fixing of the auditor’s remuneration; and (iii) approved and confirmed the Company’s Omnibus Equity Incentive Compensation Plan (the ‘Omnibus Plan‘).

A summary of all of the items approved at the Meeting (including details of the Omnibus Plan) are described in the Company’s Information Circular dated October 8, 2025, which can be found under the Company’s profile on SEDAR+ at www.sedarplus.ca. The Omnibus Plan, in its entirety, is attached as Schedule ‘A’ to the Information Circular provided to shareholders of the Company in respect of the annual general meeting of the Company’s shareholders held on December 15, 2023.

After the Meeting, the directors of the Company: (i) appointed the following officers of the Company: Andrew Pollard as President and Chief Executive Officer, William (Bill) Howald as Executive Chairman, Randy Minhas as Chief Financial Officer, Daniel Vickerman as SVP, Corporate Development and Amit Kumar as Corporate Secretary; and (ii) appointed Thomas (Tom) Peregoodoff as the Lead Director.

About Blackrock Silver Corp.

Backed by gold and silver ounces in the ground, Blackrock is a junior precious metal focused exploration and development company driven to add shareholder value. Anchored by a seasoned Board of Directors, the Company is focused on its 100% controlled Nevada portfolio of properties consisting of low-sulphidation, epithermal gold and silver mineralization located along the established Northern Nevada Rift in north-central Nevada and the Walker Lane trend in western Nevada.

Additional information on Blackrock Silver Corp. can be found on its website at www.blackrocksilver.com and by reviewing its profile on SEDAR+ at www.sedarplus.ca.

For further information, please contact:
Andrew Pollard, President & Chief Executive Officer
Blackrock Silver Corp.
Phone: (604) 817-6044
Email: andrew@blackrocksilver.com

Neither TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release.

NOT FOR DISTRIBUTION TO UNITED STATES NEWSWIRE SERVICES OR FOR DISSEMINATION IN THE UNITED STATES

To view the source version of this press release, please visit https://www.newsfilecorp.com/release/275628

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Brunswick Exploration Inc. (TSX-V: BRW, OTCQB: BRWXF; FRANKFURT:1XQ; ‘ BRW ‘ or the ‘ Company ‘) is pleased to announce that it has identified the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (the ‘ KSA ‘ or ‘ Saudi Arabia ‘) as highly prospective for lithium exploration. To support this new initiative and as an initial entry step into the country, BRW was awarded an exploration license in Saudi Arabia. BRW is the first hard-rock lithium company to outline and embark on a country-wide systematic exploration program in Saudi Arabia. This complements the Company’s highly successful efforts in Canada, where a maiden resource for the Mirage project is expected in early Q1 2026 and in Greenland, where an inaugural drill program is planned for 2026.

Mr. Killian Charles, President and CEO of BRW, commented: ‘Following the completion of our grassroots campaign in Greenland, we have continuously sought to utilize and leverage our unique lithium exploration expertise and Saudi Arabia is an under-explored jurisdiction for lithium with exceptional potential.’

‘Importantly, prospecting in Saudi Arabia is preferentially executed during the seasonally colder months in Canada and Greenland, allowing BRW to generate prospecting results twelve months of the year. The team is currently planning a prospecting campaign which will commence in H1 2026. This program, in addition to our forthcoming MRE at Mirage, our new discovery neighboring Rio Tinto’s Galaxy project and our future work in Greenland, promises an exciting start to the year for Brunswick Exploration.’

Exploration License

The Exploration License has been awarded pending final government approval, while the Company completes the administrative requirements to conduct exploration in the country. The license area is located roughly 150 km from the city of Buraydah and roughly 450 km east from Riyadh, the capital city of Saudi Arabia. The claim area is easily accessible by major highways and has smaller roads throughout the property. The license was selected based on preferred geology, geochemistry, and interpreted satellite imagery for a total license area of 8,467 ha.

Saudi Arabia Fundamentals

Saudi Arabia has a long mining history with well-established mining laws and strong government funding. With a supportive and pro-mining government, favorable geology, great outcrop exposure, and exceptional road access in a region of little to no historic hard rock lithium exploration, this presents a fantastic opportunity for BRW.

Saudi Arabia is actively establishing itself as a major lithium processing hub to support Middle Eastern demand. This foresight is part of the KSA’s larger program known as Saudi Vision 2030, which includes developing its resources outside of the oil and gas industry. Overall, KSA is a well-established mining jurisdiction with prominent major and junior mining companies such as Barrick, Ivanhoe Electric, Tinka Resources, and Power Metallic actively exploring there.

Qualified Person

The scientific and technical information related to this press release has been reviewed and approved by Mr. Charles Kodors, Manager, International Projects. He is a Professional Geologist registered in New Brunswick and Quebec.

About Brunswick Exploration

BRW is a Montreal-based mineral exploration company focused on grassroots exploration for lithium, a critical metal necessary to global decarbonization and energy transition. The Company is rapidly advancing its extensive portfolio of grassroots lithium properties and projects in Quebec (Mirage and Anatacau), Greenland (Nuuk Lithium) and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

Investor Relations/information

Mr. Killian Charles, President and CEO ( info@BRWexplo.ca )

Neither TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release

Cautionary Statement on Forward-Looking Information

This news release contains ‘forward-looking information’ within the meaning of applicable Canadian securities legislation based on expectations, estimates and projections as at the date of this news release. Forward-looking information involves risks, uncertainties and other factors that could cause actual events, results, performance, prospects and opportunities to differ materially from those expressed or implied by such forward-looking information. Factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from such forward-looking information include, but are not limited to, delays in obtaining or failures to obtain required governmental, environmental or other project approvals; uncertainties relating to the availability and costs of financing needed in the future; changes in equity markets; inflation; fluctuations in commodity prices; delays in the development of projects; the other risks involved in the mineral exploration and development industry; and those risks set out in the Company’s public documents filed on SEDAR at www.sedar.com. Although the Company believes that the assumptions and factors used in preparing the forward-looking information in this news release are reasonable, undue reliance should not be placed on such information, which only applies as of the date of this news release, and no assurance can be given that such events will occur in the disclosed time frames or at all. The Company disclaims any intention or obligation to update or revise any forward-looking information, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise, other than as required by law. Neither the TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in the policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this news release.

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The U.S.-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) announced on Monday, after the delivery of more than 187 million free meals to Palestinians in the Gaza Strip without Hamas stealing their aid, that it will shift its work to other aid organizations.

The GHF launched its operation on May 26 to ensure meals reached the Gazan population and to prevent Hamas terrorists from looting goods. According to GHF, it ‘provided more than 1.1 million packs of ready-to-use supplementary food (RUSF) for malnourished children.’

GHF Executive Director John Acree said, ‘From the outset, GHF’s goal was to meet an urgent need, prove that a new approach could succeed where others had failed, and ultimately hand off that success to the broader international community. With the creation of the Civil-Military Coordination Center (CMCC) and a rejuvenated engagement of the international humanitarian community, GHF believes that moment has now arrived,’ he said in a statement to Fox News Digital.

Acree continued, ‘GHF has been in talks with CMCC and international organizations now for weeks about the way forward, and it’s clear they will be adopting and expanding the model GHF piloted. As a result, we are winding down our operations as we have succeeded in our mission of showing there’s a better way to deliver aid to Gazans.

‘From our very first day of operations, our mission was singular: feed civilians in desperate need. We built a new model that worked, saved lives and restored dignity to civilians in Gaza. Our dedicated and compassionate team, including former U.S. service members, humanitarians, local Gazan workers and other partners like Samaritan’s Purse, risked their lives to feed the people in Gaza amidst an active war conflict,’ he said.

U.N. aid organizations plagued by corruption and alleged support for Hamas terrorism reportedly bristled at the effectiveness of GHF.

Since May, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) has faced numerous attacks over its operations, including accusations that hundreds of Gazans were killed and injured at distribution sites. The United Nations and other nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) also blasted GHF for what they said was its weaponization of aid. The commissioner-general of UNRWA in July called for an end to GHF, saying it ‘provides nothing but starvation and gunfire to the people of #Gaza.’

In August, a whistleblower confirmed to Fox News Digital that ‘the IDF is actively helping the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation get food into the hands of civilians while U.N. agencies, including WFP and OCHA, through their unwillingness to coordinate with the IDF, are inhibiting the distribution of such aid.’

Stéphane Dujarric, a spokesperson for the United Nations secretary general, told Fox News Digital at the time that the whistleblower’s ‘accusation is delusional.’

GHF told Fox News Digital that ‘it repeatedly offered to help U.N. agencies secure and distribute their aid to meet the need in Gaza while preventing looting and diversion. During its entire four-and-a-half months of operations, not a single GHF aid truck was looted.’

GHF stated that ‘American-led solutions and compassion work,’ attributing its success to ‘the Trump administration’s call for innovation and early confidence in our mission, recognizing that American leadership, clarity of purpose and accountability to results are still the international gold standard.’

GHF leaders said they are prepared to revive the mission ‘if new humanitarian needs are identified and will not dissolve as a registered NGO.’

Acree said,’What our team will miss the most are the friendships and camaraderie developed with thousands of Gazans, especially the women and children we served. In early July, as the food security situation in Gaza improved, our operations stabilized, and we experienced a major shift in winning over the trust of aid seekers to the point where our aid sites became local hangout spots for women and children interacting with our team on a daily basis. We will miss them dearly.’

Hamas invaded Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, resulting in the mass murder of over 1,200 people, including more than 40 Americans. Hamas kidnapped 251 people during the invasion and still holds three dead hostages, according to Israel. Trump’s peace plan for Gaza outlines no role for Hamas in post-war Gaza governance and demands the total disarming of the Iran-backed jihadist terrorist organization.


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Making life more affordable for Americans will be a key part of House Republicans’ remaining agenda for this Congress, Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., said Friday.

In an interview with Fox News Digital, the leader of the House of Representatives acknowledged there was a ‘short amount of time’ for lawmakers to be in D.C. before the end of this year but said they would be working toward a number of goals, including President Donald Trump’s ‘affordability’ agenda.

‘We have a lot of executive orders that we want to continue to codify through the end of the year. We’re still doing regulatory reform to end the Biden-era regulations. We did some of that this week,’ Johnson said.

‘There’s a lot of initiatives left on the table, things for us to do and a short amount of time to do it in.  But we’re really bullish about the ideas that we’re bringing forward over the next few weeks and in the coming months about reducing the cost of living.’

He said ‘affordability’ was ‘the buzzword of the day.’

‘We have an affordability agenda, as the president has been touting, and we have to do that in earnest. Healthcare is part of that. But it’s just the costs across the board,’ Johnson said.

He blamed the previous Democratic administration’s policies for the high cost of living seen today, arguing former President Joe Biden approved policies that led to higher inflation.

‘We the people rightfully revolted against that, and gave us the power again in January. But the economy is a very complex thing, you don’t flip a switch and just change it all in one week. It takes a while,’ Johnson said.

The beginning of Biden’s term was marked by record-high inflation, but that eased somewhat as the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic slowly subsided. Throughout his four years, however, the rise in consumer prices outpaced average wage growth, according to a Texas A&M University analysis.

Republicans promised to lower the cost of living when they took over the levers of power in Washington earlier this year. Johnson said a hallmark of that was Trump’s ‘One Big, Beautiful Bill Act,’ since rebranded as the ‘working families’ tax cut.’

‘By the time we get into the first and second quarter of next year, as Treasury Secretary Bessent has said, we should have an economic boom because of all of these pieces will be coming into play. Taxes will be lower, no tax on tips and overtime, lower taxes on seniors. And then there’ll be more investment because we have all the pro-growth policies and tax policies that will allow the job creators, entrepreneurs, risk-takers, innovators to do what they do,’ Johnson argued.

‘Everything I just described will happen in due time, and it will. So we’re very bullish about it.’

Republicans are also expected to spend the next several weeks working on a healthcare package aimed at lowering sky-high premiums many Americans face, while also seeking to reform what they see as a badly flawed Obamacare system.

Several House committees are also expected to advance legislation in the coming weeks focused on lowering energy costs, including fixing an outdated system for permitting new energy projects.


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Introduction

The gold standard was a monetary system that defined a unit of a nation’s currency as a fixed weight of gold and made the two mutually exchangeable. For much of modern history, several versions of this pairing served as the foundation of global trade and finance. Under the gold standard, governments promised to redeem paper money for a defined amount of gold on demand, which made the value of currencies stable and predictable. That stability fueled unprecedented global integration, linking the prosperity of many nations through the shared economic logic of gold.

The gold standard was largely abandoned during the twentieth century, but debate over its virtues and flaws endures. Supporters see it as a bulwark against inflation and government overspending; critics call it too rigid for modern economies. Understanding what the gold standard was, how it worked, and why it fell out of favor helps to clarify not only a pivotal era in economic history but also recurring arguments about money, fiscal discipline, and currency stability. 

What Is the Gold Standard?

Under an active gold standard, a country defines its currency as equivalent toa specific weight of gold. Governments or central banks advertise willingness to buy or sell gold at that fixed price, ensuring that paper money is “as good as gold.” When the United States adopted the classical gold standard, one dollar equaled about one-twentieth of an ounce of gold. Anyone could, in theory, exchange paper currency for that amount of metal. 

This convertibility linked every participating currency to gold, and to one another, creating a system of fixed exchange rates. A dollar, a pound, or a franc all represented certain weights of gold, making international trade and investment far more predictable. Because the supply of gold changed only slowly, the total amount of money governments could print was naturally limited. That constraint is what advocates of the gold standard consider its greatest strength: it restricted governments from printing money without real value behind it. 

Over time, the gold standard evolved in several forms. The gold specie standard, dominant in the nineteenth century, involved coins made of gold circulating alongside paper notes that were fully redeemable for gold. After World War I, many nations moved to a gold bullion standard, in which paper money could be exchanged for large bars of gold held by central banks, but gold coins disappeared from daily use. Later, the gold exchange standard — most notably the Bretton Woods system after 1944 — linked national currencies indirectly to gold through reserve currencies such as the US dollar. Each version reflected an attempt to preserve gold’s stability while adapting to changing political and economic conditions. 

How the Gold Standard Worked

The gold standard operated through a simple but powerful mechanism: every unit of currency was a claim on a fixed quantity of gold held by the issuing authority. Central banks or treasuries maintained gold reserves to back that commitment. When a country ran a trade surplus, gold flowed in; when it ran a deficit, gold flowed out. These movements automatically regulated domestic money supplies and prices. 

This dynamic was captured in the price-specie flow mechanism, first described by the nineteenth-century economist David Hume. If a nation imported more than it exported, gold left the country to pay for those goods. The resulting contraction of the money supply reduced prices and wages, making exports cheaper and imports dearer until balance was restored. Conversely, gold inflows expanded the money supply and lifted prices, damping exports and stimulating imports. In theory, this automatic adjustment kept the global economy in equilibrium without the need for government manipulation. 

The gold standard’s self-correcting nature was both a discipline and a constraint. Governments could not simply expand credit or pursue inflationary spending without risking a drain of gold reserves. At the same time, this rigidity left little room for active responses to recession, war, or financial panic. 

By the late nineteenth century, the major industrial nations — Britain, Germany, France, Japan, and the United States — had adopted this system. Their currencies were convertible into gold at fixed rates, creating what historians call the classical gold standard (1870s–1914). The resulting predictability underpinned an era of extraordinary growth in trade, capital flows, and industrialization. 

Advantages of the Gold Standard

A number of benefits distinguished the gold standard from later fiat-money systems.

Price Stability 

Because gold production increases only slowly, the total supply of money expands at a slow and generally steady pace. This natural limitation kept long-term inflation low. Over decades, average prices under the classical gold standard remained remarkably stable, especially when compared to the persistent inflation of the fiat-currency era. 

Predictability and Confidence 

The promise that paper money could be converted into gold made currencies credible. Businesses could plan investments and trade agreements without fearing sudden currency devaluations. Fixed exchange rates reduced uncertainty in international commerce and encouraged the flow of capital across borders. 

Fiscal and Monetary Discipline 

Linking money creation to gold restrained governments from overspending or financing deficits by printing currency. Monetary policy was effectively automatic: a nation could not expand its money supply unless it acquired more gold. For this reason, advocates view the gold standard as a guardrail against political manipulation of money and a deterrent to reckless borrowing. 

Promotion of International Trade 

A universal gold anchor simplified exchange and reduced transaction costs. With stable exchange rates, traders and investors faced fewer risks, and international settlements could be made in a currency recognized everywhere. 

Protection Against Manipulation 

Unlike modern systems, in which central banks can devalue currencies or engage in “quantitative easing,” the gold standard made competitive devaluations and “currency wars” far more difficult. Its rules constrained the temptation to seek economic advantage through monetary distortion. 

Encouragement of Saving and Investment 

Stable prices preserved the purchasing power of money, fostering an environment in which long-term planning, capital accumulation, and thrift were rewarded. Investors could rely on real returns rather than on nominal gains eroded by inflation.

To the gold standard’s defenders, these traits explain why the classical gold standard coincided with rapid industrialization, robust trade expansion, and rising living standards across much of the world. 

Alleged Disadvantages of the Gold Standard: A Balanced Examination

Critics of the gold standard see those same features — discipline and rigidity — as liabilities. But many alleged flaws reflect implementation failures or modern misinterpretations, rather than inherent defects. 

Inflexibility and Limited Policy Response 

Opponents argue that tying money to gold prevents governments and central banks from acting decisively during crises. Under the gold standard, expanding the money supply or lowering interest rates risked losing gold reserves. Supporters counter that this discipline prevented the political misuse of money and forced governments to confront fiscal realities instead of masking them with currency inflation. 

Deflationary Tendencies 

Because gold supplies grow slowly, economies under the standard could face mild deflation during periods of rapid productivity growth. Critics warn that falling prices increase debt burdens and discourage investment. Much of this “deflation,” however, was of the benign kind — reflecting efficiency gains rather than collapsing demand — and often coincided with strong economic growth. 

Vulnerability to Gold Supply Shocks 

The discovery of new gold deposits could modestly increase money supplies, while scarcity could constrain growth. Still, such changes were gradual and predictable (about one percent per year) compared with the abrupt inflationary shocks that fiat regimes can unleash through policy error or political expediency. 

Constraints on Growth 

Some economists claim that a gold-based system limits credit creation. Historically, however, banking systems developed fractional-reserve practices that allowed credit to expand well beyond physical gold holdings, so long as public confidence remained intact. The industrial revolutions of Britain, Germany, and the United States unfolded entirely under gold-linked regimes. 

Difficult International Coordination 

The interwar period demonstrated how uneven adherence to gold rules could destabilize the system. Yet the problem lay in inconsistent policies — overvalued currencies, protectionist trade barriers, and poor coordination — rather than in gold itself. 

Exposure to Crises 

Some have claimed that the gold standard worsened bank runs by restricting emergency liquidity. But under the classical system, private clearinghouses often filled that role effectively by issuing temporary certificates and policing member banks. Such crises also occur under fiat systems; their frequency since 1971 suggests that discretion is no panacea. 

Historical Instability 

The Great Depression is often cited as proof that the gold standard was fatally flawed. In fact, many economists — including Barry Eichengreen and Milton Friedman — acknowledge that poor policy choices, such as Britain’s overvalued return to pre-war parity and the Federal Reserve’s inaction in 1931-33, deepened the downturn. Nations that left gold earlier — like Britain in 1931 — recovered faster than those that clung rigidly to it. The failure was less about gold itself than about governments’ unwillingness to adapt intelligently. 

In short, while the gold standard imposed constraints, many of its supposed defects stemmed from mismanagement or misunderstanding. Every monetary system involves trade-offs; gold’s discipline may appear harsh, but it also forestalled the chronic inflation and debt accumulation that define modern economies. 

Rise of the Gold Standard

Gold has served as money for millennia because of its scarcity, divisibility, and durability. Ancient civilizations used gold coins as units of account and stores of value, but the formal linkage between gold and national currencies developed gradually with the rise of modern banking.

In early modern Europe, goldsmiths issued paper receipts for stored metal, which began circulating as money. The realization that not all depositors redeemed their gold simultaneously led to fractional-reserve banking — a key innovation that allowed credit expansion beyond physical reserves. 

Britain was the first major nation to codify a gold standard, officially adopting it in 1821 after years of wartime inflation. Its global influence ensured that others followed: Germany in 1871, the United States in 1879, France and Japan soon thereafter. By the 1870s, the classical gold standard had become the backbone of international finance. Currencies were freely convertible into gold, exchange rates were fixed, and trade imbalances were corrected through automatic gold flows. 

This system coincided with rapid globalization. Capital moved freely, shipping and communication costs fell, and international investment flourished. The gold standard’s credibility helped unify the world economy in a way unmatched until late in the twentieth century. 

Collapse of the Gold Standard

The end of the gold standard came not from economic theory, but from the pressures of war, depression, and political expedience. 

World War I (1914) 

The classical gold standard’s first collapse came when belligerent nations suspended convertibility to finance massive military spending. Paper money flooded economies, and inflation followed. By the war’s end, the system was in tatters. 

The Interwar Gold Exchange (or “Managed”) Standard (1919–1933) 

After the war, several nations tried to restore the pre-war order. Britain returned to gold in 1925 at its old parity, overvaluing the pound and triggering deflation. Other countries followed with similar missteps, attempting to maintain gold convertibility without the fiscal discipline that had once supported it. The result was a fragile and uncoordinated system that collapsed under the strain of the Great Depression. Britain abandoned gold in 1931; the United States followed in 1933 for domestic use, though it maintained limited international convertibility. 

The Bretton Woods System (1944–1971) 

In the wake of World War II, nations sought a more flexible gold-based order. The Bretton Woods agreement pegged other currencies to the US dollar, while the dollar itself was convertible into gold at $35 per ounce. For two decades, the system promoted stability and growth. Yet in its success were the seeds of its downfall. As global trade expanded, the supply of dollars grew far faster than US gold reserves. Massive spending on the military in Vietnam and on expansive social programs at home fueled deficits and inflation. Confidence in the dollar waned. 

In August 1971, President Richard Nixon suspended the dollar’s convertibility into gold — a moment known as the Nixon Shock. Within two years, the world’s major economies had shifted to floating exchange rates. By 1973, the gold standard, in all its forms, had come to an end. 

Conclusion

The gold standard shaped global economic history for nearly two centuries. It imposed a clear, transparent rule linking money to a tangible asset, thereby restraining inflation and curbing political manipulation. That very discipline, however, proved incompatible with the fiscal demands of modern warfare, welfare states, and activist monetary policy. 

The shift to fiat money systems brought flexibility to spend more but also chronic inflation, recurring financial crises, and rising public debt. Today, few economists advocate a full return to gold, recognizing that the scale and complexity of global finance make it impractical. But the gold standard remains a touchstone in debates over monetary integrity, symbolizing a time when money was anchored in something real — and when the value of currency depended less on trust in the discretion of governments than on the weight of a metal measured in ounces. 

Even if the world never returns to a gold-based system, understanding how it worked — and why it failed — offers enduring lessons. Stability and discipline come at a cost, but so does the freedom to create money without constraint. The long arc of monetary history suggests that neither extreme provides a permanent answer, yet the gold standard endures as a benchmark against which every modern experiment is, in some sense, still judged.

References

Bordo, M. D., & Schwartz, A. J. (Eds.). (1984). A Retrospective on the Classical Gold Standard, 1821–1931. University of Chicago Press. 

Bordo, M. D. (1981). The classical gold standard: Some lessons for today. Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Review, 63(5), 2–17. 

Eichengreen, B. (1996). Globalizing Capital: A History of the International Monetary System (2nd ed.). Princeton University Press. 

Eichengreen, B., & Sachs, J. (1985). Exchange rates and economic recovery in the 1930s. Journal of Economic History, 45(4), 925–946. 

Friedman, M., & Schwartz, A. J. (1963). A Monetary History of the United States, 1867–1960. Princeton University Press. 

Luther, W. J., & Earle, P. C. (2021). The Gold Standard: Retrospect and Prospect. 

Menger, C. (1892). On the origin of money. Economic Journal, 2(6), 239–255. 

Officer, L. H. (2008). The price of gold and the exchange rate since 1791. Journal of Economic Perspectives, 22(1), 115–134. 

Rockoff, H. (1984). Drastic Measures: A History of Wage and Price Controls in the United States. Cambridge University Press. 

Smith, V. (1990). The Rationale of Central Banking and the Free Banking Alternative (L. H. White, Ed.). Liberty Fund. (Original work published 1936)

On Capitol Hill this week, five Democratic senators accused the Trump administration of “sweetheart deals with Big Tech” that have “driven up power bills for ordinary Americans.” 

Their letter, addressed to the White House, faulted the administration for allowing data-center operators to consume “massive new volumes of electricity without sufficient safeguards for consumers or the climate.”

But the senators’ complaint points to a deeper reality neither party can ignore: artificial intelligence is changing America’s energy economy faster than policy can adapt. Every conversation with ChatGPT, every AI-generated image, every search query now runs through vast new physical infrastructure — data centers — that consume more electricity than some nations. 

The world’s appetite for digital intelligence is colliding with its appetite for cheap, reliable power. 

A New Industrial Landscape 

The anonymous-looking gray boxes—bigger than football fields—rising across Virginia, Texas, and the Arizona desert look like nothing special from the highway. Inside, however, they house the machinery of the new economy: tens of thousands of high-end processors performing trillions of calculations per second. These are the “intelligence factories,” where neural networks are trained, deployed, and refined — and where America’s energy system is pushed to its limits and beyond. 

“People talk about the cloud as if it were ethereal,” energy analyst Jason Bordoff said recently. “But it’s as physical as a steel mill — and it runs on megawatts.” 

According to the Pew Research Center, US data centers consumed about 183 terawatt-hours (TWh) of electricity in 2024 — some 4 percent of total US power use, and about the same as Pakistan. By 2030, that figure could exceed 426 TWh, more than double today’s level. The International Energy Agency (IEA) warns that, worldwide, data-center electricity demand will double again by 2026, growing four times faster than total global power demand. 

The driver is artificial intelligence. Training and running large language models (LLMs) like ChatGPT and other models requires enormous computing clusters powered by specialized chips — notably Nvidia’s graphics processing units (GPUs). Each new generation of AI systems multiplies power requirements. OpenAI’s GPT-4 reportedly demanded tens of millions of dollars’ worth of electricity just to train. Multiply that by hundreds of companies now racing to build their own AI models, and the implications for the grid are staggering. 

Where the Power Is Going 

The American and global epicenter (for now) of this new build-out remains Loudoun County, Virginia — nicknamed “Data Center Alley” — where nearly 30 percent of that county’s electricity now flows to data facilities. Virginia’s utilities estimate that data centers consume more than a quarter of the whole state’s total generation.

Elsewhere in America, the story is similar. Microsoft’s burgeoning data center complex near Des Moines has forced MidAmerican Energy to accelerate new natural-gas generation. Arizona Public Service now plans to build new substations near Phoenix to serve a cluster of AI facilities; Texas grid operator ERCOT says data centers will add 3 gigawatts of demand by 2027. 

And the trend, by the way, isn’t limited to electricity. Most facilities require water for cooling. A single “hyperscale” campus can use billions of gallons per year, prompting local backlash in drought-prone regions.

The Political Blame Game 

Soaring demand has begun to translate into electric-rate filings. US utilities asked for $29 billion in rate increases in the first half of 2025, nearly double the total for the same period last year. Executives cite “data-center growth and grid reinforcement” as drivers. 

And so, we get the letter from Senate Democrats — among them Elizabeth Warren and Sheldon Whitehouse — urging the Department of Energy to impose “efficiency standards” and “consumer protections” before authorizing new power contracts for AI operators. “We cannot allow Silicon Valley’s hunger for compute to be fed by higher bills in the heartland,” they wrote. 

The Trump administration shot back a reply. Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said, “The president will not let bureaucrats throttle America’s leadership in AI or its supply of affordable energy. If the choice is between progress and paralysis, he chooses progress.” 

That framing “progress versus paralysis” captures the larger divide. The administration has prioritized energy abundance, reopening leasing on federal lands, greenlighting LNG export terminals, rolling back environmental restrictions of all kinds, and signaling renewed support for coal and nuclear power. Democrats, fixated on climate commitments, have continued to oppose expanded drilling in Alaska’s Arctic and new offshore projects, while pressing for data centers to run on renewables. 

Powering the AI Boom 

Without continuous electricity, the AI boom falters. Nvidia, Microsoft, and OpenAI are already pushing the limits of available capacity. In April, Microsoft confirmed it will buy power from the planned restart of the Three Mile Island Unit 1 reactor — mothballed since 2019 — to feed its growing data-center fleet in Pennsylvania. “We’re essentially connecting a small city’s worth of demand to the grid,” said an energy executive involved in the project. “Data centers are an order of magnitude larger than anything we’ve built for before.” 

That “small city” reference is not an exaggeration. A single hyperscale facility can draw 100 megawatts — roughly the load of 80,000 households. Dozens of such projects are under construction. 

And while the industry’s largest players are also buying wind and solar power contracts, they admit that renewables alone cannot meet the 24-hour load. “When the model is training, you can’t tell it to pause because the sun set,” one data-center engineer quipped. 

The Economics of Constraint 

From an economic perspective, what matters is not only rising demand but constrained supply. Regulations restricting oil, gas, and pipeline development keep marginal electricity generation expensive. Permitting delays for transmission lines slows the build-out of new capacity. At the same time, federal subsidies distort investment toward intermittent sources that require backup generation — often natural gas — to stabilize the grid. 

A perfect storm of policy contradictions may be brewing: a government that wants both a carbon-neutral grid and dominance in energy-hungry AI. 

“The irony is that the very politicians demanding AI leadership are the ones making it harder to power,” said economist Stephen Moore. “You can’t have artificial intelligence without real energy.” 

In a free market, higher demand would spur rapid expansion of supply. Investors would drill, build, and innovate to capture new profit opportunities. Instead, production and permitting are politically constrained, so prices must rise until demand is choked off. That is the dynamic now visible in electricity bills — and in the Senate’s sudden search for someone to blame. 

The Global Race 

Complicating it all, to say the least, is the geopolitical dimension. China, the European Union, and the Gulf states are racing to build their own AI infrastructure. Beijing’s Ministry of Industry announced plans for 50 new “intelligent computing centers” by 2027, powered largely by coal. In the Middle East, sovereign wealth funds are backing data-center projects co-located with gas fields to guarantee cheap electricity. 

If the US restricts its own energy production, it risks ceding the field. “Energy is now the limiting reagent for AI,” venture capitalist Marc Andreessen wrote this summer. “Whichever country solves cheap, abundant power wins the century.”

That insight revives old debates about industrial policy. Should Washington subsidize domestic chip foundries and their power plants, or should it clear the regulatory thicket that deters private capital from building both? Innovation thrives on liberty, not mircomanagement. 

The New Factories 

Are data centers so different from factories of the industrial age? They convert raw inputs like electricity, silicon, cooling water, and capital into valuable outputs: trained models and real-time AI services. But unlike the factories of the past, they employ few workers directly. A billion-dollar hyperscale facility may have fewer than 200 staff. That does not sit well with the communities in which the vast data centers are located. The wealth is created upstream and downstream: in chip design, software, and the cascade of productivity gains AI enables. 

Still, the indirect productivity is vast. AI-driven logistics shave fuel costs, AI-assisted medicine accelerates diagnosis, and AI-powered coding tools raises output per worker. But all of it depends on those humming, appallingly noisy, heat-filled halls of servers. As OpenAI’s Sam Altman remarked last year, “A lot of the world gets covered in data centers over time.” 

If true, America’s next great industrial geography will not be steel towns or tech corridors, but the power corridor: regions anywhere that electricity is plentiful, cheap, and politically welcome. 

Already, states like Texas and Georgia are advertising low-cost energy as a lure for AI investment. 

Markets Versus Mandates 

From a free-market perspective, the lesson is straightforward. Economic growth follows energy freedom. When government treats energy as a controlled substance — rationed through regulation, taxed for vice, or distorted by subsidies — innovation slows. When markets are allowed to meet demand naturally, abundance results. 

In the early industrial age, the United States became the world’s workshop because it embraced abundance: of coal, oil, and later electricity. Every new machine and factory depended on those resources, and entrepreneurs supplied them without central direction. Today’s equivalent is the AI data center. Its prosperity depends on letting energy producers compete, invest, and innovate without political interference. 

Politics Ahead 

Over the next year, expect the power issue to dominate AI politics. Democrats will press for efficiency mandates and carbon targets; Republicans will frame energy freedom as essential to national strength. Federal officials already are discussing a kind of “clean AI” certification system tied to renewable sourcing — critics say that could amount to a de facto quota on computer power. 

Meanwhile, utilities are rethinking grid design for a world where data centers behave like factories that never sleep. The market is responding: small, modular nuclear reactors, advanced gas turbines, and geothermal projects are attracting venture funding as potential baseload sources for AI campuses. 

For policymakers, the challenge is to resist the urge to micromanage. As AIER’s scholarship often finds, spontaneous order, not centralized control, produces both efficiency and resilience. Allowing prices to signal scarcity and opportunity will attract the investment necessary to balance America’s energy equation.

The Freedom to Compute 

In the end, the debate over data centers and electricity bills is really about the freedom to compute. The same economic laws that governed the Industrial Revolution still apply: productivity rises when entrepreneurs can transform energy into work — whether mechanical or digital. 

Artificial intelligence may be virtual, but its foundations are unmistakably physical. To sustain the AI boom without bankrupting ratepayers, the United States must choose policies that unleash energy production rather than constrict it. 

The “cloud” will always have a power bill. The question is whether that bill becomes a burden of regulation or a dividend of freedom.

HIGHLIGHTS:

  • 83.2m grading 17.35 g/t gold from 76.0 m, including
    • 46.65 m grading 27.35 g/t gold from 88.95 m
  • 70.7m grading 9.38 g/t gold from 49.65 m
  • 92.1 m grading 4.33 g/t gold from 97.1 m
  • 65.2 m grading 5.39 g/t gold from 152.2 m
  • Ana Paula drill program to be extended to 20,000 metres of drilling

Heliostar Metals Ltd. (TSXV: HSTR,OTC:HSTXF) (OTCQX: HSTXF) (FSE: RGG1) (‘Heliostar’ or the ‘Company’) is pleased to announce additional results from the current drill program at its 100% owned Ana Paula project in Guerrero, Mexico. The program aims to convert inferred ounces to higher confidence classifications. It will also support the ongoing Feasibility Study and testing the next exploration targets around the Ana Paula deposit.

Heliostar CEO, Charles Funk, commented, ‘It’s rare to find a deposit that consistently produces 50-100m wide drill intercepts of these gold grades. Ana Paula is wide, high-grade, and shallow, with good underground mining conditions. These factors drive the low $1,011 all in sustaining cost in our new PEA for the project. It will also drive high margins at the project. The current program is focused on upgrading inferred ounces to higher confidence categories and the new data will be incorporated into a Feasibility Study. The lower costs drive a lower cut-off grade in the planned mine that opens the potential for more inferred material conversion. To maximize this opportunity, we will expand the program by 33% to 20,000 metres to allow for more infill and exploration drilling at Ana Paula. Across the Company, we have another study, a Prefeasibility Study for Cerro del Gallo, planned this quarter. We are also drilling at San Agustin and La Colorada. These programs should increase production and unlock the value we see in our deep growth portfolio.’

Drilling Program

Heliostar has completed 44 holes and 12,615 metres drilled to date. Drilling is designed along north-south sections with angled holes to better define the overall east-west orientation of the High Grade Panel. Heliostar’s drilling approach at Ana Paula has been to change the direction of drilling by approximately 90 degrees from the majority of historic intercepts. The Company believes that this change contributed to demonstrating more continuous and higher-grade gold mineralization within the High Grade Panel than recognized by previous operators.

Where appropriate, the holes are also being used to collect rock strength data, hydrogeologic data and samples for further metallurgical studies that will directly influence the Ana Paula mine design in the ongoing Feasibility Study.

Drill Results Summary

Holes AP-25-331, AP-25-333, AP-25-334 and AP-25-336 are resource conversion holes drilled in the central part of the High Grade Panel. Holes AP-25-334 and AP-25-336 were drilled on the same fence, with AP-25-334 targeting the polymictic breccia and hanging wall mineralization, and AP-25-336 targeting the polymictic breccia and footwall mineralization. Hole AP-25-334 intercepted a wide zone of 92.05 metres (‘m’) grading 4.33 grams per tonne (‘g/t’) gold, whilst AP-25-336 returned intervals of 3.2 m at 15.58 g/t gold, 65.15 m at 5.39 g/t and 43.55 m at 4.66 g/t gold with a 3.05 m interval with 24.64 g/t gold.

Cannot view this image? Visit: https://images.newsfilecorp.com/files/7729/275661_ee215e99b48368f4_003.jpg

Figure 1: Plan Map of the current drill program at Ana Paula

To view an enhanced version of this graphic, please visit:
https://images.newsfilecorp.com/files/7729/275661_ee215e99b48368f4_003full.jpg

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Figure 2: Cross-Section through newly reported holes AP-25-334 and AP-25-336

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Hole AP-25-333 is located 60 m to the east of the above-mentioned fence and returned two high-grade intervals of 26.6 m grading 4.78 g/t gold and 83.2 m grading 17.35 g/t gold. Hole AP-25-331 is a step out 32 m to the southeast and returned a 7.95 m zone grading 7.92 g/t gold and a wide high-grade interval of 70.65 m at 9.38 g/t gold.

Holes AP-25-330, AP-25-332 and AP-25-335A are geotechnical holes for mine development planning and returned assay results in line with expectations, including intervals of 48.5 m of 5.48 g/t gold, 5.2 m of 4.23 g/t gold and 35.55 m of 6.73 g/t gold, respectively.

True widths are unknown. Mineralization at Ana Paula occurs as disseminations or vein stockworks with variable controls including rock porosity, lithology and fault networks.

Drilling continues throughout the High Grade Panel and its less well-defined east and west edges, with assays pending from twelve holes. Two of the drills have begun to target deeper inferred mineralization and the northern exploration zone, which is approximately 250 m north of the High Grade Panel that has two drill holes pending assay.

The next Ana Paula drill results are anticipated to be released in December.

Drilling Results and Coordinates Tables

Table 1: Significant Drill Intersections

Holey From
(metres)
To
(metres)
Interval
(metres)
Au
(g/t)
Topcut
Au (g/t)
Hole
Purpose
AP-25-330 45.4 93.9 48.5 5.48 Geotechnical Hole
including 45.4 53.6 8.2 7.41
and 82.3 85.5 3.2 20.8
AP-25-331 29.9 38.85 8.95 7.27 Resource Hole
including 36.0 38.85 2.85 15.5
and 49.65 120.3 70.65 9.38 1
including 59.65 75.0 15.35 18.3
AP-25-332 140.5 145.75 5.25 4.23 Geotechnical Hole
AP-25-333 38.8 65.4 26.6 4.78 4.58 Resource Hole2
including 38.8 44.45 5.65 11.3 10.4 2
and including 59.7 65.4 5.7 9.45
and 76.0 159.2 83.2 17.3 15.8 1,2
including 88.95 135.6 46.65 27.3 24.5 3
and including 146.1 155.3 9.2 9.60
AP-25-334 97.1 189.15 92.05 4.33 Resource Hole
including 98.2 105.85 7.65 8.17
and including 140.15 147.15 7.0 8.49
and including 166.1 180.0 13.9 9.70
AP-25-335A 12.75 21.2 8.45 4.76 Geotechnical Hole
and 45.0 80.55 35.55 6.73
including 45.0 51.7 6.7 11.0
and including 62.2 80.55 18.35 7.94
and 102.6 108.2 5.6 4.67
and 140.55 145.8 5.25 5.01
AP-25-336 25.15 28.35 3.2 15.6 Resource Hole
and 128.35 141.7 13.35 2.50
including 128.35 132.0 3.65 6.85
and 152.2 217.35 65.15 5.39 4.98 4
including 152.2 162.4 10.2 13.6
including 173.8 176.85 3.05 24.6 15.8 4

 

1 Result reported in November 20th Q3, 2025 quarterly news release
2 Top cut to 47 ppm Au based on resource model domains
3 Top cut to 64 ppm Au based on resource model domains
4 Top cut to 38 ppm Au based on resource model domains

Drilling Coordinates Table

Table 2:  Drill Hole Details

Hole ID Easting
(WGS84 Zone 14N)
Northing
(WGS84 Zone 14N)
Elevation
(metres)
Azimuth
(°)
Inclination
(°)
Length
(metres)
AP-25-330 410,274 1,997,960 962.6 0 -53 126.0
AP-25-331 410,205 1,998,038 917.7 180 -50 192.0
AP-25-332 410,030 1,998,137 972.8 180 -55 329.4
AP-25-333 410,191 1,998,065 907.1 180 -55 204.0
AP-25-334 410,126 1,998,071 931.8 178 -55 302.0
AP-25-335A 410,254 1,998,038 913.4 180 -46 237.0
AP-25-336 410,128 1,998,121 933.8 180 -55 353.0

 

Ana Paula Preliminary Economic Assessment Note

Heliostar announced the results of a Preliminary Economic Assessment on November 6, 2025. References to the results in this release are provided in greater detail here.

Quality Assurance / Quality Control

Drill core is PQ size, and the core is cut in half, with half sent for analysis. Core samples were shipped to ALS Limited in Zacatecas, Zacatecas, Mexico, for sample preparation and for analysis at the ALS laboratory in North Vancouver. The Zacatecas and North Vancouver ALS facilities are ISO/IEC 17025 certified. Gold was assayed by 30-gram fire assay with atomic absorption spectroscopy finish, and overlimits were analyzed by 30-gram fire assay with gravimetric finish.

Control samples comprising certified reference and blank samples were systematically inserted into the sample stream and analyzed as part of the Company’s quality assurance / quality control protocol.

Statement of Qualified Person

Stewart Harris, P.Geo., a Qualified Person, as such term is defined by National Instrument 43-101 – Standards of Disclosure for Mineral Projects, has reviewed the scientific and technical information that forms the basis for this news release and has approved the disclosure herein. Mr. Harris is employed as Exploration Manager of the Company.

About Heliostar Metals Ltd.

Heliostar is a gold mining company with production from operating mines in Mexico. This includes the La Colorada Mine in Sonora and the San Agustin Mine in Durango. The Company also has a strong portfolio of development projects in Mexico and the USA. These include the Ana Paula project in Guerrero, the Cerro del Gallo project in Guanajuato, the San Antonio project in Baja Sur and the Unga project in Alaska, USA.

FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT:

Charles Funk
President and Chief Executive Officer
Heliostar Metals Limited
Email: charles.funk@heliostarmetals.com
Phone: +1 844-753-0045
Rob Grey
Investor Relations Manager
Heliostar Metals Limited
Email: rob.grey@heliostarmetals.com
Phone: +1 844-753-0045

 

Neither TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in the policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release.

Cautionary Statement Regarding Forward-Looking Information

This news release includes certain ‘Forward-Looking Statements’ within the meaning of the United States Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and ‘forward-looking information’ under applicable Canadian securities laws. When used in this news release, the words ‘anticipate’, ‘believe’, ‘estimate’, ‘expect’, ‘target’, ‘plan’, ‘forecast’, ‘may’, ‘would’, ‘could’, ‘schedule’ and similar words or expressions, identify forward-looking statements or information. These forward-looking statements or information relate to, among other things, show the full extent of the deposit, upgrade and expand the resource base, growing our annual production profile in the near term and bringing additional production online.

Forward-looking statements and forward-looking information relating to the terms and completion of the Facility, any future mineral production, liquidity, and future exploration plans are based on management’s reasonable assumptions, estimates, expectations, analyses and opinions, which are based on management’s experience and perception of trends, current conditions and expected developments, and other factors that management believes are relevant and reasonable in the circumstances, but which may prove to be incorrect. Assumptions have been made regarding, among other things, the receipt of necessary approvals, price of metals; no escalation in the severity of public health crises or ongoing military conflicts; costs of exploration and development; the estimated costs of development of exploration projects; and the Company’s ability to operate in a safe and effective manner and its ability to obtain financing on reasonable terms.

These statements reflect the Company’s respective current views with respect to future events and are necessarily based upon a number of other assumptions and estimates that, while considered reasonable by management, are inherently subject to significant business, economic, competitive, political, and social uncertainties and contingencies. Many factors, both known and unknown, could cause actual results, performance, or achievements to be materially different from the results, performance or achievements that are or may be expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements or forward-looking information and the Company has made assumptions and estimates based on or related to many of these factors. Such factors include, without limitation: precious metals price volatility; risks associated with the conduct of the Company’s mining activities in foreign jurisdictions; regulatory, consent or permitting delays; risks relating to reliance on the Company’s management team and outside contractors; risks regarding exploration and mining activities; the Company’s inability to obtain insurance to cover all risks, on a commercially reasonable basis or at all; currency fluctuations; risks regarding the failure to generate sufficient cash flow from operations; risks relating to project financing and equity issuances; risks and unknowns inherent in all mining projects, including the inaccuracy of reserves and resources, metallurgical recoveries and capital and operating costs of such projects; contests over title to properties, particularly title to undeveloped properties; laws and regulations governing the environment, health and safety; the ability of the communities in which the Company operates to manage and cope with the implications of public health crises; the economic and financial implications of public health crises, ongoing military conflicts and general economic factors to the Company; operating or technical difficulties in connection with mining or development activities; employee relations, labour unrest or unavailability; the Company’s interactions with surrounding communities; the Company’s ability to successfully integrate acquired assets; the speculative nature of exploration and development, including the risks of diminishing quantities or grades of reserves; stock market volatility; conflicts of interest among certain directors and officers; lack of liquidity for shareholders of the Company; litigation risk; and the factors identified under the caption ‘Risk Factors’ in the Company’s public disclosure documents. Readers are cautioned against attributing undue certainty to forward-looking statements or forward-looking information. Although the Company has attempted to identify important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially, there may be other factors that cause results not to be anticipated, estimated or intended. The Company does not intend, and does not assume any obligation, to update these forward-looking statements or forward-looking information to reflect changes in assumptions or changes in circumstances or any other events affecting such statements or information, other than as required by applicable law.

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Here’s a quick recap of the crypto landscape for Friday (November 21) as of 9:00 p.m. UTC.

Get the latest insights on Bitcoin, Ether and altcoins, along with a round-up of key cryptocurrency market news.

Bitcoin and Ether price update

Bitcoin (BTC) was priced at US$84,479.56, down by 2.4 percent over 24 hours. Its lowest price of the day was US$82,623.93, and its highest was US$85,341.10.

Bitcoin price performance, November 21, 2025.

Bitcoin price performance, November 21, 2025.

Chart via TradingView.

Ether (ETH) was at US$2,736.67, down 3.8 percent over 24 hours. Its lowest price on Friday was US$2,685.25 and its highest was US$2,799.63.

Altcoin price update

  • XRP (XRP) was priced at US$1.94, down by 3.3 percent over 24 hours. Its lowest price of the period was US$1.89 and its highest was US$1.99.
  • Solana (SOL) was trading at US$127.23, down by 4.8 percent over 24 hours. Its lowest price of the day was US$124.20 and its highest was US$129.79.

Fear and Greed Index snapshot

CMC’s Crypto Fear & Greed Index plunged to 11, firmly in “extreme fear” and its lowest level since late 2022. Reports of large-scale whale liquidations have added to the uncertainty, amplifying pressure across an already fragile market.

CMC Crypto Fear and Greed Index, Bitcoin price and Bitcoin volume.

CMC Crypto Fear and Greed Index, Bitcoin price and Bitcoin volume.

Chart via CoinMarketCap.

Crypto derivatives and market indicators

Open interest in Bitcoin futures declined slightly by 0.98 percent, settling at approximately US$58.67 billion, while Ether futures saw a larger drop of 2.50 percent, closing at US$32.39 billion. This contraction in open interest suggests some unwinding of speculative positions or reduced leverage in the derivatives markets for both leading cryptocurrencies.

Bitcoin experienced US$30.48 million in contracts being liquidated, predominantly short positions, whereas Ether had a slightly higher US$32.43 million liquidated, also mostly shorts. This contrasts with recent days, where the vast majority of liquidations were long positions, indicating a shift in market dynamics and trader positioning.

Bitcoin’s relative strength index was low at 31.32, signaling that it is nearing oversold territory, which can often precede a price rebound or a period of consolidation. Its funding rate was recorded at a modestly positive 0.003 percent, indicating a nearly balanced market where long traders pay a small premium to shorts, reflecting moderate bullish sentiment or mild cost for holding long perpetual contracts.

Ether’s funding rate was higher at 0.01 percent, suggesting stronger bullish positioning and higher demand for long exposure in Ether perpetual futures. Generally, positive funding rates imply that longs are paying shorts, signaling optimism about price appreciation. However, considering liquidations skewed toward shorts recently, this could reflect traders attempting to position for a reversal or hedging against potential volatility.

Today’s crypto news to know

Anchorage expands institutional custody and staking support

Anchorage Digital now supports full custody and staking for HYPE tokens across the Hyperliquid ecosystem. Institutions can custody HYPE on HyperEVM and stake on HyperCORE through Anchorage Digital Bank, the only federally chartered crypto bank in the US, as well as through Anchorage Digital Singapore and the self-custody wallet Porto.

Partnering with staking provider Figment, Anchorage now offers a regulated pathway for institutional participation in the Hyperliquid DeFi ecosystem. This expansion also includes custody for additional ERC-20 tokens like Kinetiq, enhancing institutional access to Hyperliquid’s fast-growing blockchain infrastructure.

Crypto lawyer seeks New York attorney general seat

Khurram Dara, a 36-year-old cryptocurrency lawyer with experience at Coinbase Global (NASDAQ:COIN) and Bain Capital Crypto, has announced his candidacy for attorney general in the state of New York.

Dara is seeking the Republican nomination to challenge the incumbent Democrat, Letitia James, in the 2026 election. Dara’s campaign focuses on ending what he calls ‘lawfare,’ the use of legal tactics for political gain, reducing regulatory overreach, especially in the crypto sector and fostering a more business-friendly environment in New York.

Dara holds a JD from Columbia Law and is affiliated with the Council on Foreign Relations and crypto advocacy groups. He resides in Brooklyn and will face Republican primary competition from Michael Henry.

BitMine reports strong earnings, plans Ether staking launch

BitMine Immersion Technologies (NYSEAMERICAN:BMNR) announced net income of US$328.2 million for its 2025 fiscal year, with fully diluted earnings per share of US$13.39.

The company also declared an annual dividend of US$0.01 per share, becoming the first large-cap crypto firm to pay a dividend. Notably, BitMine announced plans to launch its ‘Made-in-America Validator Network,’ an Ethereum staking infrastructure, in early 2026 with initial pilot partners selected for testing.

Coinbase rolls out Ether-backed loans

Coinbase has launched a new lending feature for eligible US users.

They will be able borrow up to US$1 million in USDC by using Ether as collateral. The product is integrated with the Morpho protocol on Base, though users interact with it entirely through Coinbase’s interface. Borrowers keep exposure to Ether’s price movements while accessing liquidity without having to sell their holdings.

The service is available across most US states, with the exception of New York due to regulatory requirements.

Securities Disclosure: I, Giann Liguid, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

Securities Disclosure: I, Meagen Seatter, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

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