A Forgotten Silver District Is Getting a Second Look
And this time, it’s being drilled properly.
Not investment advice. Disseminated on behalf of Kingsmen Resources. (TSX-V: KNG | OTCQB: KNGRF).
Gold and silver are pushing toward record highs again.
Inflation concerns haven’t gone away. Governments are drowning in debt. Elections, wars, and geopolitical tensions are back in focus. Even the AI boom is creating new demand for power, metals, and hard assets.
When uncertainty piles up like this, investors tend to gravitate toward gold and silver. Not as a trade, but as a store of value.
And when precious metals break out, something else usually happens quietly in the background:
people start hunting for the next generation of silver and gold stories.
That’s where a small Canadian explorer called Kingsmen Resources enters the picture.
Before we go any further, this is one of those stories that’s worth understanding properly, not from a headline, but from the data.
👉 Our full research report breaks down the geology, investment thesis, price target, and more. (More on that below.)
The simple Kingsmen story
Kingsmen Resources (TSX-V: KNG | OTCQB: KNGRF) is a Canadian exploration company focused on silver and gold in Mexico.
Not just anywhere in Mexico, but in the Parral Mining District, a historic region that has produced silver and gold for more than a century.
For decades, this district was carved up into small concessions, owned by different groups, mined sporadically at surface, and never really explored in a coordinated way.
Kingsmen did something most juniors don’t bother attempting.
They rolled up roughly 15 historic concessions into one unified land package, now known as the Las Coloradas Project.
Same district. Same high-grade vein system.
But for the first time, controlled and explored as a single project.
Why Las Coloradas is different
Las Coloradas isn’t a greenfield concept. It’s a place where silver and gold were already pulled out of the ground.
The missing piece was depth.
Historic miners followed veins near surface, then stopped.
What never happened was systematic modern drilling below those old workings, using today’s understanding of structure and mineral systems.
That’s exactly what Kingsmen has started doing.
The company recently completed its first modern drill program at Las Coloradas.
They’ve already released initial drill results, and additional results from that same program are still pending.
Importantly, this first round wasn’t about proving everything at once. It was about understanding the system.
Now, with that data in hand, Kingsmen is planning a second phase of drilling, targeting areas that look more compelling with the benefit of early results.
This is typically where exploration stories either fade or get more interesting.
Fresh Drill Results Just Released
Just yesterday, Kingsmen released new drill results from its Las Coloradas project and they add real weight to the story.
At the DBD target, the company intersected high-grade silver mineralization at shallow depth. Drilling returned 241 grams per tonne silver equivalent over 3.15 meters, including a higher-grade section of 525 grams per tonne silver equivalent over 1.15 meters, starting at roughly 70 meters down-hole.
This is important for two reasons. First, the mineralization is near surface, which can be advantageous from an exploration and development standpoint. Second, the silver occurs with massive sulphides and strong pathfinder elements like arsenic, antimony, and bismuth which are signals geologists use to identify larger mineralized systems.
Even more interesting, this intercept sits within a structure that has around 300 meters of strike length that has never been drilled, despite evidence of historic underground artisanal mining in the area. There are no historical drill holes and no maps of the old workings, meaning modern exploration is just getting started here.
According to President Scott Emerson, the drilling has confirmed the DBD zone is highly prospective, and the company plans additional drilling in 2026 to further test multiple targets within a broader mineralized corridor measuring roughly 2.5 kilometers long by 1 kilometer wide.
A second shot on goal
Las Coloradas isn’t the only asset.
Kingsmen also controls the Almoloya Project, located nearby in the same region. Like Las Coloradas, it hosts historic silver-gold workings and has seen limited modern exploration.
That gives the company two opportunities in one of Mexico’s better-known precious-metal districts, not a single binary bet.
Why timing matters
Silver and gold don’t need to go parabolic for this story to matter.
They just need to stay relevant.
When metals are weak, explorers get ignored.
When metals are strong, investors start asking a different question:
“Where could the next new supply come from?”
Historic districts that were never properly drilled at depth tend to move up the list quickly.
Kingsmen now controls one of those districts, has completed its first drill campaign, has more results coming, and is already planning what comes next.
That’s usually when names start showing up on more watchlists.
This is where deeper research matters
At this stage, the opportunity isn’t about hype. It’s about understanding the setup.
Our full research report on Kingsmen Resources goes into:
• What the early drill results actually show
• Why Las Coloradas may extend at depth
• How Almoloya fits into the broader picture
• Key risks that investors should not ignore
• What future drilling could realistically change (and what it won’t)
👉 If you’re going to follow this story, the report is the best place to start.
The takeaway
Kingsmen Resources isn’t being pitched as a sure thing.
It’s an early-stage silver-gold exploration story in a historic Mexican district that, until now, has never been drilled properly as a single project.
Silver and gold are back in focus.
High-quality projects are scarce.
And Kingsmen has just taken the first real step in testing what might still be hiding below old workings.
That doesn’t mean you buy it.
It means you know it exists before the crowd does.
👉 Read the full Kingsmen Resources research report here
(And as always, review company filings and do your own due diligence.)
Disclaimer
This newsletter was disseminated on behalf of Kingsmen Resources Ltd. (TSX-V: KNG | OTCQB: KNGRF). It is not investment advice. Cashu Group and/or its affiliates have been compensated for content creation and distribution. Investing in exploration companies involves significant risk, including loss of capital. Readers should conduct their own research and consult a licensed financial professional before making investment decisions.
This content was produced on behalf of Kingsmen Resources (TSX:KNG OTC:KNGRF) and sponsored by the company. The influencer was compensated by Research Stock Digest. to create this content. This is not financial advice, and viewers are encouraged to consult a financial professional before making investment decisions. Investing in companies involves significant risks, and past performance does not guarantee future results. Please do your own research.






