Mr.
Craig Dalziel reports
OROCO CLOSES FIRST TRANCHE OF PRIVATE PLACEMENT FINANCING
Oroco Resource Corp. has closed an initial tranche of its non-brokered private placement announced Sept. 24, 2025, realizing gross proceeds of $1,530,999 (U.S.) through the sale of 7,654,995 units at the price of 20 cents per unit. Each unit consists of one common share of the company and one-half of one share purchase warrant. Each whole warrant entitles the holder to purchase one share of the company for 30 U.S. cents for a period of 24 months from closing.
This portion of the financing is subscribed for by Mexico-based investors, including new independent director, Faysal Rodriguez (subscribing for five million units), and two Mexico-based strategic investors.
The proceeds will be used to advance the Santo Tomas project toward its planned prefeasibility study and for general corporate purposes. The closing is carried out pursuant to prospectus exemptions of applicable securities law and is subject to final acceptance by the TSX Venture Exchange. The shares and any shares issued on the exercise of warrants are subject to a hold period expiring on March 6, 2026.
Craig Dalziel, Oroco's chairman, commented: "We appreciate the considerable impact Faysal Rodriguez continues to have on Oroco. Most recently, his contribution is most evident through his substantial personal financial participation, along with members of his professional network from Mexico's mining and construction sectors. Their support reflects a growing recognition within Mexico's business community of the importance of the Santo Tomas project and the development opportunities it represents for northern Sinaloa. We see this as further validation of the company's plans to continue the advancement of the Santo Tomas project toward prefeasibility and beyond."
The participation of Mr. Rodriguez (a newly appointed director) in the non-brokered private placement is considered a related party transaction pursuant to National Instrument 61-101, Protection of Minority Security Holders in Special Transactions. The company is relying on the exemptions from the formal valuation requirements contained in Section 5.5(b) of MI 61-101 and the minority shareholder approval requirements contained in Section 5.7(1)(a) of MI 61-101 as the fair market value of the related party participation in the offering does not exceed 25 per cent of the company's market capitalization.
About Oroco Resource Corp.
The company holds a net 85.5-per-cent interest in those central concessions that comprise 1,173 hectares (the core concessions) of the Santo Tomas project, located in northwestern Mexico. The company also holds an 80-per-cent interest in an additional 7,861 hectares of mineral concessions surrounding and adjacent to the core concessions (for a total project area of 9,034 hectares, or 22,324 acres). The project is situated within the Santo Tomas district, which extends up to the Jinchuan Group's Bahuerachi project, approximately 14 kilometres to the northeast. The project hosts significant copper porphyry mineralization initially defined by prior exploration spanning the period from 1968 to 1994. During that time, the project area was tested by over 100 diamond and reverse circulation drill holes, totalling approximately 30,000 metres. Commencing in 2021, Oroco conducted a drill program (phase 1) at Santo Tomas, with a resulting total of 48,481 metres drilled in 76 diamond drill holes.
The drilling and subsequent resource estimates and engineering studies led to a revised MRE (mineral resource estimate) and an updated PEA (preliminary economic assessment) being published and filed in August, 2024, which studies are available at the company's website and by reviewing the company profile on SEDAR+.
The Santo Tomas project is located within 170 kilometres of the Pacific deepwater port at Topolobampo and is serviced by highway and proximal rail (and parallel corridors of trunk grid power lines and natural gas) through the city of Los Mochis to the northern city of Choix. The property is reached, in part, by a 32-kilometre access road originally built to service Goldcorp's El Sauzal mine in Chihuahua state.
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