McEwen Inc. (NYSE: MUX) (TSX: MUX) has reported new drill results from the Gold Bar Mine Complex in Nevada's Eureka Mining District, highlighted by what the company describes as the best hole drilled to date at the Windfall deposit. The results show 5.55 grams per tonne gold over 44.2 meters, including a high-grade interval of 48.38 grams per ton gold over 4.6 meters of oxide mineralization. These findings demonstrate strong grade continuity over long intervals and indicate that higher-grade mineralization remains open at depth.
The company plans to test deeper extensions with drilling scheduled for March, as the Windfall deposit, along with the Lookout Mountain and Unity Ridge areas, advances toward production. This development supports McEwen's broader corporate strategy to double its gold production by 2030. The full details of the announcement are available in the company's press release at https://ibn.fm/93kZ1.
For business and technology leaders tracking resource development, the implications extend beyond a single drill hole. The results suggest the potential for a long-life, high-grade gold deposit in a well-established mining jurisdiction. Nevada's Cortez Trend is a prolific mineral-rich region, and successful development at Windfall could significantly contribute to McEwen's production profile. The company's newsroom, accessible at https://ibn.fm/MUX, provides ongoing updates on this and other projects.
McEwen's portfolio diversification adds another layer of strategic importance. The company holds a 46.4% interest in McEwen Copper, which owns the advanced-stage Los Azules copper development project in Argentina. According to the last financing round, the implied value of McEwen's ownership stake is US$456 million. The Los Azules project is designed to be one of the world's first regenerative copper mines, targeting carbon neutrality by 2038. Its Feasibility Study results were detailed in a press release dated October 7, 2025.
The advancement of the Windfall deposit represents a critical step in McEwen's multi-asset growth strategy across the Americas. For industry observers, the combination of near-term gold production growth in Nevada and a large-scale, future-focused copper project in Argentina positions McEwen at the intersection of traditional resource extraction and modern environmental stewardship goals. The continuity of high-grade intervals at Windfall reduces geological risk and increases confidence in the project's economic viability as it moves closer to contributing to the company's 2030 production targets.


