Shore Capital has kicked off coverage of Thor Explorations Ltd (TSX-V:THX, AIM:THX, OTC:THXPF, FRA:T2X) with a fresh outlook, highlighting progress at the Douta project in Senegal and strong cash flows from Segilola in Nigeria. The broker put a ‘buy’ rating on the stock and set a 125p price target, pointing to sizeable upside if production and cash forecasts hold. Key numbers from a recent pre-feasibility study underpin the case, while management execution and regional exploration add further potential.
Thor Explorations sits squarely in view as it builds toward multi-asset production, a stage Shore Capital describes as the company ‘coming of age’. The firm’s coverage frames Thor as moving from project operator to producer with a clearer earnings runway. That shift is central to the re-rating thesis the broker lays out.
Shore Capital’s initiation came in a 20-page note that opened with a ‘buy’ rating and a 125p price target, implying around 55% upside from recent closes. The note highlights progress at Douta and the cash-generating profile of Segilola as the twin pillars of value. Those elements combine to support the broker’s valuation and near-term expectations.
The recently published pre-feasibility study for Douta provides the technical backbone for the growth story, with production targeted in the 2028 financial year. Management expects Douta’s output to offset expected declines at Segilola, smoothing the company’s production profile. That timing anchors the company’s medium-term plans.
Financial projections in the study are striking, with a post-tax net present value of $633 million and an internal rate of return of 61%. The plan forecasts initial production of 411,000 ounces over the first four years, creating a concentrated early cash flow window. Those early years are the driver behind the rapid payback expectation.
Capital requirements are not trivial, but the payback picture looks sharp on the study’s numbers: initial capital costs estimated at $254 million are expected to be recovered within 11 months of steady production. That pace, if achieved, materially de-risks the build phase and shortens the period of capital intensity. It also strengthens the argument that Douta can quickly contribute to enterprise-level cash flow.
Segilola remains core to Thor’s near-term value, with forecasts pointing to $357 million of free cash flow over the next three years. That cash is positioned to support development largely through internal funding rather than external dilution. The mine’s contribution is central to the broker’s confidence in funding future growth.
Management’s delivery record was highlighted as a differentiator, with the team credited for bringing Nigeria’s first large-scale gold mine into production on time and repaying project debt within 3.5 years. That operational track record matters when lenders and investors judge feasibility and credibility. Shore Capital treats that history as evidence that the company can execute the Douta plan.
Beyond the two flagship assets, Shore Capital notes further upside from exploration across Nigeria, Senegal and Côte d’Ivoire. The broker sees potential for three operating mines in West Africa within five years if exploration and development follow the plan. That optionality underpins the case for re-rating, contingent on delivery and commodity prices.
