Welcome to our dedicated page for Mako Mng SEC filings (Ticker: MAKOF), a comprehensive resource for investors and traders seeking official regulatory documents including 10-K annual reports, 10-Q quarterly earnings, 8-K material events, and insider trading forms.
This page provides access to regulatory filings and related disclosure for Mako Mining Corp. (MAKOF), a publicly listed gold mining, development and exploration company. While the company does not have U.S. SEC filings in this feed, investors can review its Canadian public disclosure, including financial statements, management’s discussion and analysis and technical reports filed on SEDAR+.
Financial and operating disclosure for Mako Mining includes quarterly and annual financial statements that discuss revenue from gold sales at the San Albino mine in Nicaragua and the Moss Mine in Arizona, mine operating cash flow, adjusted EBITDA, net income and non-GAAP performance measures such as cash costs per ounce and all-in sustaining costs. These documents explain how operating results at the company’s mines affect its financial position and cash balances.
Technical reports and project-level disclosure describe the San Albino open pit gold mine, the Moss Mine, the PEA-stage Eagle Mountain Project in Guyana and the permitted Mt. Hamilton Gold-Silver Project in Nevada. For Mt. Hamilton, filings include a mineral resource estimate prepared in accordance with Canadian standards and a technical report that outlines geology, mineralization, resource modeling and permitting status.
Corporate filings and circulars address transactions such as the proposed acquisition of Mt. Hamilton LLC from Sailfish Royalty Corp. in exchange for a gold stream and net smelter return royalty, related party considerations involving Wexford-managed funds, and the work of independent special committees in reviewing these transactions. Other documents may cover equity financings, private placements, and normal course issuer bids accepted by the TSX Venture Exchange.
On Stock Titan, AI-powered tools can help summarize lengthy financial and technical documents, highlight key terms such as streaming and royalty agreements, and point out trends in operating metrics across reporting periods. This allows investors to review Mako Mining’s filings more efficiently and focus on the disclosures most relevant to their analysis of MAKOF.
Mako Mining Corp. reports that on March 23, 2026 it completed the acquisition of 100% of the membership interests of Mt. Hamilton LLC, owner of the Mt. Hamilton gold project in Nevada, through its subsidiary Mako US Corp., from Sailfish Royalty Corp.
The US$40 million purchase price will be paid via a gold stream under an amended and restated gold purchase agreement. For the first 60 months, Sailfish will buy about 341.7 troy ounces of gold per month at 20% of the London Bullion Market Association PM Fix price, with a floor of US$2,700 and a cap of US$3,700 per ounce. For the following 72 months, Sailfish will buy about 100 troy ounces per month at 20% of the same benchmark price.
The stream is secured by first-ranking security interests over Mako’s current and future assets tied to the Mt. Hamilton project. Because both Mako and Sailfish are controlled by Wexford Capital LP, the deal is a related party transaction under MI 61-101, but Mako relied on exemptions from formal valuation and minority approval as the fair market value is below 25% of its market capitalization.
Mako Mining reported sharply improved 2025 results, driven by higher gold prices, increased sales volumes and the addition of the Moss Mine. Revenue rose to $148.5M and net income to $33.7M, while operating cash flow reached $53M, boosting year-end cash to $77.3M and working capital to $82.9M.
The San Albino Mine remained the main contributor, though grades declined and costs rose, while Moss Mine ramp-up added low‑grade, higher‑cost ounces. Mako strengthened its balance sheet via a $37.4M equity raise and full repayment of Wexford debt, then acquired the Mt. Hamilton gold project under a $40M gold stream and advanced the Eagle Mountain project’s permitting. Management disclosed a material weakness in internal control over financial reporting tied to IT and journal‑entry segregation but outlined a remediation plan.