Perpetua’s Golden Mirage: A Dividend Hunter’s Paradox

The sun hung low over the Idaho desert, casting long shadows across the Stibnite gold project’s barren fields. Here, beneath the cracked soil, lay the promise of antimony and silver, minerals that hummed with the static of forgotten wars. JGP’s exit, recorded in the SEC’s cold ledger, felt less like a transaction and more like a ritual-the closing of a chapter in a saga where profit and peril danced a waltz as old as mining itself. The shares, now priced at $24.84, shimmered with the feverish glow of a boom town, but the company’s books told a different tale: a $22.1 million loss and a revenue line as barren as the Idaho plains.







