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SRQ Resources Inc. — Management Reports 2026
Apr 1, 2026
48493_rns_2026-03-31_9932fed6-4592-4cd4-a47e-25349ae7f49f.pdf
Management Reports
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SRQ
SRQ RESOURCES INC.
MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS
FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2025
INDEX
- SCOPE OF MD&A AND NOTICE TO INVESTORS ... 2
- FORWARD LOOKING STATEMENTS ... 2
- CORPORATION OVERVIEW ... 2
- HIGHLIGHTS ... 2
- MINERAL PROPERTY PORTFOLIO ... 3
- TRANSACTIONS WITH RELATED PARTIES ... 19
- COMMITMENTS ... 19
- OUTSTANDING SHARE DATA ... 20
- OFF-BALANCE SHEET ARRANGEMENTS ... 20
- CONFLICTS OF INTEREST ... 20
- CRITICAL ACCOUNTING POLICIES ... 20
- ESTIMATES, JUDGMENTS AND ASSUMPTIONS ... 21
- RISKS RELATED TO FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS ... 21
- RISKS AND UNCERTAINTIES ... 21
SRQ RESOURCES INC.
Management's discussion and analysis for the year ended December 31, 2025
SCOPE OF MD&A AND NOTICE TO INVESTORS
This management's discussion and analysis of financial position and results of operations ("MD&A") complements the audited financial statements of SRQ Resources Inc. (the "Corporation"), for the year ended December 31, 2025, which are compared to the year ended December 31, 2024.
The financial statements include SRQ Resources Inc. ("SRQ").
These audited financial statements have been prepared in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards as issued by the International Accounting Standards Board ("IFRS Accounting Standards"). Except as otherwise disclosed, all dollar figures included therein and in the following MD&A are quoted in Canadian dollars. The Corporation has prepared this MD&A following the requirements of National Instrument 51-102, Continuous Disclosure Obligations.
Management of the Corporation is responsible for the preparation and presentation of the financial statements and notes thereto, MD&A and other information contained in this MD&A. Additionally, it is management's responsibility to ensure the Corporation complies with the laws and regulations applicable to its activities.
The financial statements and the MD&A have been reviewed by the audit committee on March 31, 2026, and approved by the Board of directors.
FORWARD LOOKING STATEMENTS
Certain statements made in this MD&A are forward-looking statements or information. The Corporation is hereby providing cautionary statements identifying important factors that could cause the Corporation's actual results to differ materially from those projected in the forward-looking statements. Any statements that express, or involve discussions as to, expectations, beliefs, plans, objectives, assumptions or future events or performance (often, but not always, through the use of words or phrases such as "may", "is expected to", "anticipates", "estimates", "intends", "plans", "projection", "could", "vision", "goals", "objective" and "outlook") are not historical facts and may be forward-looking and may involve estimates, assumptions and uncertainties which could cause actual results or outcomes to differ materially from those expressed in the forward-looking statements. In making these forward-looking statements, the Corporation has assumed that the current market will continue and grow and that the risks listed below will not adversely impact the business of the Corporation. By their nature, forward-looking statements involve numerous assumptions, inherent risks and uncertainties, both general and specific, which contribute to the possibility that the predicted outcomes may not occur or may be delayed. The risks, uncertainties and other factors, many of which are beyond the control of the Corporation that could influence actual results are summarized below under the heading "Risks and Uncertainties".
Further, unless otherwise noted, any forward-looking statement speaks only as of the date of this MD&A, and, except as required by applicable law, the Corporation does not undertake any obligation to update any forward-looking statement to reflect events or circumstances after the date on which such statement is made or to reflect the occurrence of unanticipated events. New factors emerge from time to time, and it is not possible for management to predict all such factors and to assess in advance the impact of each such factor on the business of the Corporation, or the extent to which any factor or combination of factors may cause actual results to differ materially from those contained in any forward-looking statement.
CORPORATION OVERVIEW
SRQ Resources Inc. is a Canadian base metals corporation exploring for nickel, copper, and platinum group elements (PGEs) in the province of Québec. The Corporation was incorporated on June 2, 2021, under the Canada Business Corporations Act. The Corporation's head office is located at #132 – 1320 Graham Blvd., Mont-Royal, Quebec, Canada, H3P 3C8. The Corporation's common shares are listed on the TSX Venture Exchange (the "TSX-V") under the trading symbol "SRQ.V".
SRQ owns 1,242 exploration claims in the Canadian province of Québec, with Lac Brulé being the most advanced exploration project (Figure 1). The Lac Brulé property consists of 691 contiguous mining claims covering an area of approximately 39,436 ha, located approximately 148 km west-northwest of the town of Mont-Laurier, Québec. A near-surface, Ni-Cu project, Lac Brulé is located at a five-hour drive from Montréal. The project's prospectivity for base
SRQ RESOURCES INC.
Management's discussion and analysis for the year ended December 31, 2025
metals has been confirmed by geological mapping, the presence of a surface gossan, and geophysical surveys. The presence of the historic Renzy Ni-Cu mine located 50 kilometers to the south-east and at the heart of the large regional pattern further adds to the area's mineral exploration appeal. The 2023-24 drill program at the Lac Brulé property confirmed the presence of copper and nickel mineralization associated with an undeformed ultramafic intrusion sequence. Subsequent geophysical surveys identified strong targets along strike, and at depth, of the maiden discovery. The 2025 drill program tested a very large combined airborne HELITEM II & Gravity Gradiometer target (Target 900) located 6 km from the initial discovery and extending over more than 2 km stating a 500 m below surface with continuity at depth.
HIGHLIGHTS
- On January 27, 2025, the Corporation announced a grant to the Directors and Officers aggregate of 1,430,000 stock options, each exercisable to acquire one Common Share at an exercise price of $0.13 on or before January 24, 2035, being the date that is 10 years from their date of grant of January 24, 2025.
- On March 19, 2025, the Corporation announced a fully committed non-brokered private placement, which closed on March 24, 2025. See "Financing" section.
- On April 3, 2025, the Corporation announced the reception of an "Autorisation d'Exploration à Impact" ("ATI-7"), granting exploration rights across all 42 claims covering 24.8 km² at Lac Brennan project in Quebec.
- On June 17, 2025, the Corporation announced the mobilization of drilling crews and the commencement of its 4,000 meters diamond drilling program at Target 900, located on the Lac Brulé property, under Autorisation d'Exploration à Impact ATI-118, in the province of Quebec, Canada.
- On July 14, 2025, the Corporation announced it has intersected the intrusive magmatic complex at Target 900 and identified new prospective geophysical targets at Lac Brulé in Québec. Target 900 drilling shows strong geological correlation with the Ambient Noise Tomography ("ANT") model completed by Caur Technologies ("Caur") in May–June 2025. The ANT interpretation highlights several convolutions and embayment along two predominantly vertical feeders, which, if confirmed, could represent highly prospective traps for nickel-copper (Ni-Cu) massive sulphide accumulation.
- On September 3, 2025, the Corporation announced the results of the 2025 summer exploration program:
- 3,876m drilled across three holes plus extension of LB-24-29, which intersected mineralized pyroxenite and gabbro, including 2.20m of semi-massive sulfides mineralization
- Ambient Noise Tomography ("ANT") survey completed over a 5.6km x 5.5km grid by Caur Technologies ("Caur")
- 880 line-km airborne gravity survey across the central and western property completed by Xcalibur Multiphysics ("Xcalibur")
- Downhole Time-domain Electromagnetic ("DHTEM") survey by TMC Geophysics in Val-d'Or on LB-25-30 identified a moderate off-hole anomaly beginning at 900 meters and increasing in strength to the end of the hole without reaching the peak response.
- On October 27, 2025, a second DHTEM survey was completed by Lamontagne Geophysics in hole LB-24-29. The hole was blocked an 860m, nearly 100m above the intersected mineralisation. Despite having the hole surveyed down that level, results are showing an EM response building from 400m down the hole, suggesting something significant further down as an offhole target. It is planned to clean-reopen hole LB-24-29 and resurvey DHTEM.
FINANCING
On March 24, 2025, the Corporation announced the closing of a non-brokered private placement for the issuance of 18,103,399 shares of the Corporation, for aggregate gross proceeds of $2,371,393. The private placement comprised two tranches, as follows:
- Tranche 1 – Hard Dollar Units: 14,786,982 units at a price of $0.12 per Hard Dollar Unit, comprised of one Common Share that does not qualify as a "Flow-Through" share and one Common Share purchase warrant,
SRQ RESOURCES INC.
Management's discussion and analysis for the year ended December 31, 2025
entitling the holder to purchase one Common share at an exercise price of $0.18 for a period of 2 years from the date of the issuance, for gross proceeds of $1,774,438; and
- Tranche 2 - Flow-Through (FT) Shares: 3,316,417 Common Shares that qualify as "flow-through shares" (within the meaning of subsection 66(15) of the Income Tax Act (Canada)) at a price of $0.18 per FT share for gross proceeds of $596,955.
In consideration for providing certain finders' services to the Corporation in connection with the private placement, the Corporation paid cash finders' fees in the aggregate $46,785 and issued 304,910 warrants to purchase shares exercisable at $0.18 for a period of 24 months from closing of the FT shares' offering. The finders fees were paid to certain arm's-length finders, representing up to 7% of the gross proceeds received by the Corporation from subscribers that were introduced to the Corporation by such finders.
MINERAL PROPERTY PORTFOLIO
PROVINCE OF QUEBEC, CANADA PROJECTS
SRQ is focused on the discovery and development of high-grade deposits of nickel, copper, and PGEs in Quebec, Canada.
SRQ holds exploration mining properties in Quebec with its flagship project being the Lac Brulé Nickel-Copper-PGEs project located at a five-hour drive from Montreal. SRQ is committed to responsible exploration and development practices, with a focus on environmental and social sustainability.
SRQ has claims in the so-called Labrador Through covering an Iron formation and historical base metals mineralisation. The property is within Naskapi First Nation territory.
The Lac Brulé Property: A New Frontier for Ni-Cu Exploration
SRQ initiated the Lac Brulé and Lac Brennan projects through the acquisition of exploration claims in the Nivernais and Esgriseilles Townships (Lac Brulé) and the Dauphine Township (Lac Brennan), all located in the Province of Québec. The center of the Lac Brulé property lies at UTM coordinates 314,700mE and 5,198,400mN (UTM-18, NAD83) on topographic maps NTS 31K13 and 31K14.
Dr. Marc-Antoine Audet (Ph.D., Geology) first recognized the exploration potential of the Lac Brulé area in the late 1980s during a base-metal compilation study for Falconbridge Ltd. At that time, the region had never been systematically prospected, and no records existed of previous ground-based exploration prior to SRQ's involvement.
Although no historical exploration programs had been carried out, publicly available regional geophysical data—including government-produced magnetometry and gravity maps, along with stream and lake sediment surveys—provided early geological insights and indicated significant exploration potential.
The closest mining operation with historical production is the former Renzy nickel-copper mine, located approximately 48 km east-southeast of Lac Brulé. The Renzy mine operated from 1969 to 1972, producing nickel and copper concentrates shipped to Falconbridge in Sudbury, Ontario. At Lac Brulé, SRQ is targeting similar accumulations of nickel and copper mineralization, analogous to the Renzy deposit and other major Ni-Cu systems in Québec and Labrador, including the world-class Voisey's Bay Ni-Cu-PGM deposit.
The Lac Brulé property is located on traditional Anishinaabe territory. SRQ, through its Strategic Advisor for First Nations, Mr. Jerry Peltier (former Chief of the Kanesatake First Nation), has maintained ongoing communication with the Kitigan Zibi Anishinabeg regarding the Lac Brulé Exploration Project. Portions of SRQ's mineral claims also fall within the traditional territories of the Lac Barrière, Wolf Lake, and Kipawa Anishinaabe First Nations.
The Lac Brulé property represents a significant new frontier for nickel-copper (Ni-Cu) exploration. Since 2021, SRQ has delineated a large, previously unrecognized magmatic intrusive complex with strong mineral potential. Located
SRQ RESOURCES INC.
Management's discussion and analysis for the year ended December 31, 2025
within the Grenville Geological Province—an orogenic belt renowned for its complex metamorphic history and potential to host magmatic sulfide systems—the property has emerged as a high-potential exploration target.
Regional geological mapping and multiple airborne surveys, including HELITEM II electromagnetics and gravity surveys, have identified several key features of interest. Among them, the Gossan Zone, with a discovered 550 m long nickel & copper mineralized lens, the North Zone, still un-explored and the large Target 900 are standing out: The Target 900 is outlined by a strong gravity anomaly. The anomaly spatially coincides with magnetic and electromagnetic signatures, suggesting the presence of zones where nickel and copper sulfides may have concentrated.
The scale, coherence, and depth of this feature make it one of the most compelling exploration targets on the property. Airborne gravity surveys conducted in 2023 and 2024 have been instrumental in refining targets across the property.
The scale, coherence, and depth extent of this feature make it one of the most compelling targets, together with the North Zone, within the project area. Time-Domain Electromagnetic (TDEM) surveys—including airborne HELITEM II data and downhole TDEM (DHTEM) surveys—have further enhanced subsurface imaging and target resolution. Initial HELITEM II results outlined conductive horizons associated with surface gossans and the margins of the intrusive complex. In July 2025, a DHTEM survey in drillhole LB-25-30 detected a moderate off-hole anomaly starting from 900 m and increasing at depth until the end of the hole without reaching the pick. On October 27, 2025, a second DHTEM survey was completed by Lamontagne Geophysics in hole LB-24-29. The hole was blocked an 860m, nearly 100m above the intersected mineralisation. Despite having the hole surveyed down to that level, results are showing an EM response building from 400m down the hole, suggesting something significant further down as an offhole target. It is planned to clean-reopen hole LB-24-29 and resurvey DHTEM as it is difficult to establish clear target's conductivity or size of the suspected target.
These integrated datasets provide valuable insights into the geological controls of mineralization and are guiding drill targeting toward the most prospective zones.
Initial drilling at the Gossan Zone in 2023 confirmed the presence of mineralized pyroxenite units, with massive to semi-massive sulfide intervals containing pentlandite, chalcopyrite, and pyrrhotite. Subsequent drilling at Target 900 intersected magmatic pyroxenites and diorites with centimetric sulfide pods and notable grades.
These findings suggest drilling may have narrowly missed one or more embayment's or feeder conduits.
At depth, the geology is interpreted as an undeformed mafic-ultramafic intrusive complex, likely emplaced during the final stages of Grenvillian tectonism. Petrological studies (e.g., drill core from DDH LB-24-29) reveal evidence of sulfide immiscibility, including nickel-depleted olivine and cobalt-rich pentlandite—indicators of significant metal transfer into the sulfide phase. Of particular note is a 15 m sulfide intercept beginning at 954 m in hole LB-24-29, which was deepened in August 2025 to 1,161 m. This intercept suggests adjacent zones of further mineralization (Figure 6).
Comparisons have been made between the Lac Brulé geological setting and major global deposits such as Nova-Bollinger (Australia) and Jinchuan (China), both of which occur in highly metamorphosed, structurally complex terranes. These analogies further support the potential for a large-scale discovery.
SRQ initiated its first drilling program at Lac Brulé on July 3, 2023, completing 13 holes totaling 3,942 m. In October 2023, five additional holes added 1,246 m. A third drilling phase launched in April 2024 included 11 holes totaling 3,015 m—10 at the Gossan Zone and one (LB-24-29) testing a strong gravity anomaly at Target 900, located 6 km west of the Gossan Zone. From June 15 to August 15, 2025, Phase 4 added 3,876 m of drilling, including three deep holes and the extension of LB-24-29 from 951 m to 1,161 m.
While semi-massive to massive sulfides have not yet been found in abundance at Lac Brulé, the geological parallels with Renzy, coupled with promising drilling results, strongly suggest that Lac Brulé may host a significant nickel-copper discovery. Several areas within and adjacent to the Gossan Zone and Target 900 remain unexplored, including the extensive North Zone—defined by a 3 km-long airborne EM anomaly (Figures 2 & 5).
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SRQ RESOURCES INC.
Management's discussion and analysis for the year ended December 31, 2025

Figure 1: Lac Brulé Ni-Cu project: exploration claims forming 1 large block of 625 claims and a smaller block of 42 claims called Lac Brennan south-west of the old Renzy Mine. The vertical gradient of gravity anomalies is outlined with the first derivative of the gradient magnetometer shown in background.
LAC BRULÉ EXPLORATION WORK
On October 26 and 27, 2023, the Corporation flew a 600 line-km test airborne gravimetric survey overlaying the main area of interest at the Lac Brulé project. In April 2024, the Corporation flew a 438 line-km airborne gravity survey as a follow-up on the test-survey of October 2023 and a 539 line-km at the lac Brennan project (Figure 2).
From April 19 to May 07, 2024, the Corporation proceed with the Phase III drill program for $3,015\mathrm{m}$ including ten holes at the Gossan Zone (Figures 3 & 4) and one hole (LB-24-29; Target 900) drilled $6\mathrm{km}$ west of the Gossan Zone testing a high gravity target. Table 1 shows assay results for the drilling to date at the Gossan zone.
At the end of April 2024, the Corporation drilled hole LB-24-29 targeted the center of a $3.5\mathrm{km}\times 1.7\mathrm{km}$ strong gravity anomaly. The hole intersected $735\mathrm{m}$ of a continuous magmatic sequence composed of pyroxenite and peridotite with Po, minor CPy and Pn in the last $70\mathrm{m}$ of the hole. For technical reasons, the hole terminated in pyroxenite at a vertical depth of $750\mathrm{m}$ from surface. The hole intersected several mineralised zones suggesting that the hole may have only reached the roof of a mineralized zone. The hole was deepened in August 2025 to $1,161\mathrm{m}$ . A $15\mathrm{m}$ of disseminated sulfide including a $2.20\mathrm{m}$ of semi massive sulfide was intercepted from $953\mathrm{m}$ , showing magmatic flows banding of intercalated mineralization and pyroxenite/gabbro magmatic material. It is interpreted as the edge of a larger mineralized system suggesting adjacent zones of further mineralization (Figure 7)
Ongoing surface regional geological mapping outlined a very large magmatic intrusive complex which seems to be deeply rooted (Figures 5 and 6).
Detailed petrological and mineralogical analysis shows that Lac Brulé Ni-Cu mineralisation has strong similarities to mineralisation from the former Renzy Ni-Cu mine.
SRQ RESOURCES INC.
Management's discussion and analysis for the year ended December 31, 2025
During the summer of 2025, SRQ achieved several milestones. From June to July, the Corporation completed 3,876 m of diamond drilling across three boreholes, including the deepening of hole LB-24-29 from 951 m to 1,161 m. In June, Caur Technologies conducted an ANT survey over Target 900, identifying complex convolutions and embayments along two vertical feeder structures. If validated, these features may represent highly prospective traps for Ni-Cu massive sulphide mineralization.
Further geophysics was carried out in July 2025, when Xcalibur completed an additional 880 line-km of high-resolution aeromagnetic and FALCON® AGG surveying, focusing on the central and western Lac Brûlé property. Data from this program, combined with the 2024 survey, provides a robust framework for future targeting. Also in July, TMC Geophysics performed a DHTEM survey on hole LB-25-30. The survey identified a moderate off-hole conductor beginning at 900 m depth and strengthening to the end of the hole, without reaching peak response. The survey was conducted using a fluxgate probe at 5 Hz and a transmitter operating at 9.6 kW power.
On October 27, 2025, a second DHTEM survey was completed by Lamontagne Geophysics in hole LB-24-29. The hole was blocked an 860m, nearly 100m above the intersected mineralisation. The survey was conducted using UTEM 4 system at 4 Hz and a transmitter operating at 10 amps. Despite having the hole surveyed down to that LEVEL, results are showing an EM response building from 400m down the hole, suggesting something significant further down as an offhole target. It is planned to clean-reopen hole LB-24-29 and resurvey DHTEM as it is difficult to establish clear target's conductivity or size of the suspected target.
Table 1: Drill hole intercepts defined using a cut-off-grade of 0.3% Ni (core lengths).
| HOLE-ID | Combined Length m
COG: 0.30% Ni | Ni % | CU % | C0 % | S % | Fe % | MgO % |
| --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- |
| Phase 1: July 2023 | | | | | | | |
| LB-23-01 | 3.35 | 0.34 | 0.25 | 0.05 | 6.87 | 16.66 | 16.92 |
| LB-23-02 | 3.10 | 0.36 | 0.52 | 0.05 | 7.94 | 18.45 | 17.59 |
| LB-23-03 | 6.75 | 0.37 | 0.36 | 0.05 | 6.96 | 17.26 | 18.49 |
| LB-23-04 | 10.65 | 0.42 | 0.33 | 0.05 | 8.19 | 18.05 | 15.57 |
| LB-23-05 | 10.80 | 0.36 | 0.29 | 0.05 | 6.79 | 16.56 | 16.41 |
| LB-23-06 | 1.85 | 0.49 | 0.33 | 0.13 | 19.35 | 34.32 | 14.29 |
| LB-23-12 | 15.10 | 0.51 | 0.35 | 0.07 | 9.62 | 20.26 | 18.69 |
| Phase 2: October 2023 | | | | | | | |
| LB-23-14 | 3.55 | 0.56 | 0.41 | 0.07 | 10.52 | 21.14 | 18.04 |
| LB-23-15 | 22.50 | 0.44 | 0.34 | 0.06 | 8.19 | 18.44 | 17.50 |
| LB-23-16 | 2.40 | 0.45 | 0.25 | 0.10 | 14.67 | 27.69 | 17.14 |
| LB-23-17 | 5.30 | 0.42 | 0.27 | 0.05 | 8.06 | 18.03 | 16.91 |
| LB-23-18 | 7.25 | 0.36 | 0.48 | 0.05 | 7.08 | 17.23 | 17.42 |
| Phase 3: April 2024 | | | | | | | |
| LB-24-21 | 11.46 | 0.38 | 0.26 | 0.05 | 7.48 | 18.48 | 20.02 |
| LB-24-22 | 2.52 | 0.39 | 0.41 | 0.05 | 8.00 | 18.05 | 17.05 |
| LB-24-23 | 13.94 | 0.38 | 0.43 | 0.05 | 7.65 | 17.61 | 16.76 |
| LB-24-24 | 2.13 | 0.39 | 0.28 | 0.05 | 7.38 | 18.02 | 22.46 |
| LB-24-25 | 4.42 | 0.34 | 0.32 | 0.05 | 7.49 | 16.68 | 15.32 |
| LB-24-26 | 10.23 | 0.37 | 0.33 | 0.05 | 7.36 | 17.69 | 17.37 |
| LB-24-27 | 2.98 | 0.38 | 0.28 | 0.05 | 7.70 | 16.96 | 17.21 |
| LB-24-28 | 5.00 | 0.54 | 0.54 | 0.07 | 10.67 | 21.67 | 15.87 |
SRQ RESOURCES INC.
Management's discussion and analysis for the year ended December 31, 2025

Figure 2: Updated 2023-24-25 airborne Gravimetry surveys with vertical cross-section N-S showing ANT interpretation. The large North Zone target has not been drilled tested yet. The Target 900 corresponds to a very large and strong gravity response of presumably dense geological material at depth (starting at $600m$ from surface).


Figure 3: 3D representation of the $550\mathrm{m}$ mineralized lens within the undeformed ultramafic layer at the Gossan Zone.
SRQ RESOURCES INC.
Management's discussion and analysis for the year ended December 31, 2025

Figure 4: SW-NE longitudinal cross-section showing the UM intrusive and the Ni-Cu mineralized horizon.
SRQ RESOURCES INC.
Management's discussion and analysis for the year ended December 31, 2025

Figure 5: Surface geophysical and geological compilation in the Gossan and Target 900 area showing EM and Gravimetry responses of the Intrusive Complex at the Lac Brulé. Sections 311500E and 310700E shows pyroxenite and gabbro-migmatite of magmatic nature. Hole LB-24-29 intersected $15\mathrm{m}$ of mineralized pyroxenite and gabbro including $2.20\mathrm{m}$ of semi-massive pyrrhotite rich sulfides. Revised interpretation is ongoing; all holes intersected a very large undeformed magmatic intrusive sequence ranging from pyroxenite to gabbro and a "magmatic migmatite".
SRQ RESOURCES INC.
Management's discussion and analysis for the year ended December 31, 2025


Figure 6: 3D geological interpretation showing the large magmatic intrusion at the Target 900, the Gossan Zone with the $550\mathrm{m}$ long mineralized lens and the 3D airborne electromagnetic inversion at the North Zone. The North Zone remains unexplored. Below: ANT's velocity isocontours.
SRQ RESOURCES INC.
Management's discussion and analysis for the year ended December 31, 2025

Figure 7: LB-24-29: 954 m, 2.20 m of semi massive, mineralized intercept showing magmatic flows banding of intercalated mineralization and pyroxenite/gabbro magmatic material. It is interpreted as the edge of a larger mineralized system.
GEOLOGICAL HIGHLIGHTS FOR THE LAC BRULÉ'S INTRUSIVE COMPLEX:
The regional geology can be summarized by the following sequence of facies.
1- Gneiss and Quartzite
2- Garnet rich Amphibolite
3- Magmatic Intrusive Sequence (1.5 Ga age)
4- Peridotite - Pyroxenite - Gabbro - Magmatic Migmatite (Late Grenville, approx. 1.0 Ga age)
5- Mineralised Pyroxenite/Gabbro - Gossan Zone
At the gossan outcrop the magmatic mafic horizon is remarkable and easily identifiable by the wide gossan presents on the surface (more than $400\mathrm{m}$ long and $60\mathrm{m}$ wide). The gossan consists mainly of massive pyroxenite with large poecilitic crystals of pyroxene (and / or amphibole) with inclusions of serpentine olivine. It also has puddles of interstitial sulfides (up to $5\%$ ). The latter are mainly formed of chalcopyrite, pyrrhotite, pentlandite and rare pyrite.
PETROLOGICAL AND MINERALOGICAL STUDIES IDENTIFY PRESENCE OF MINERALIZED PYROXENITE AT LAC BRULÉ
Up to 75 samples were carefully collected during the 2023-24 drilling programs at the Lac Brulé UM complex for detailed petrological and mineralogical studies using an optical microscope and a scanning electronic microscope ("SEM"). These studies were carried out at the ISTerre of the University of Grenoble Alpes by Professor Christian Picard, university professor (retired) of earth sciences (with special authorization from Ordre des Géologues du Québec (OGQ)).
The discovered UM complex is composed of pyroxenite and peridotite, both intruding the highly metamorphic host rock sequence. The pyroxenite includes locally porphyritic assemblages of diopside, magnesio-homblende and olivine $(\mathrm{Fo}_{80-84})$ with a lesser proportion of enstatite, intercalated with specific mineralized horizons containing up to $30\%$ sulfides mostly as net texture within the silicate gangue.
Within the intrusive meta-peridotite, low nickel contents were measured in the olivine crystals (800 to 1,600 parts per million ("ppm")) versus an expected nickel range in olivine of 3,000 to 4,000 ppm. This could reflect a strong transfer of nickel from the olivine to the sulfide liquids produced during immiscibility mechanisms.
SRQ RESOURCES INC.
Management's discussion and analysis for the year ended December 31, 2025
LAC BRULÉ NI-CU MINERALISATION: STRONG SIMILARITIES WITH THE FORMER RENZY NI-CU MINE
SRQ has compared the geological sequence and the associated mineralisation at both the Lac Brulé and the historic Renzy Ni-Cu mine. Detailed petrological and mineralogical investigations by Professor Christian Picard have confirmed the presence, at both sites, of several pyroxenite and peridotite sequences impregnated with disseminated to semi-massive mineralisation of pyrrhotite, chalcopyrite and pentlandite, all obviously intrusive in an Archean or Proterozoic sequence of paragneiss and garnet-rich amphibolite.
As at the Lac Brulé site, the Renzy sequence is made up of alternating bands of werhlites and olivine pyroxenites which present olivine paragenesis type Fo84, enstatite, diopside in a poecilitic matrix of magnesio-hornblende with traces of phlogopite. Werhlites and pyroxenites also present a magmatic bedding with subvertical free contacts, oriented NE-SW, which contrasts with the slightly sloping foliation of the paragneiss. All of these data unambiguously suggest that the Renzy complex is intrusive in the paragneiss.
At Renzy, the pyroxenites and werhlites in its mineralisation present scattered puddles (2-3%) arranged interstitially between the silicates, and consisting in order of abundance of pyrrhotite, chalcopyrite and cobalt-bearing pentlandite (Figure 8), again in all respects comparable to Lac Brulé.
A few mineralised blocks of olivine pyroxenite and werhlite, remnants of past work, were collected at the Renzy site. These blocks have the same paragenesis at: olivine type Fo84, enstatite, diopside, poeciltic magnesio-hornblende and phlogopite. Depending on the sample, they contain 15% to 70% semi-massive to massive sulphides with a net texture (net-textured type). They comprise the same proportions of pyrrhotite, chalcopyrite, and pentlandite with traces of pyrite and ilmenite. They also contain some platinum group minerals (merenskyite, hessite, etc.). It should be noted that as at Lac Brulé, the pentlandite is cobalt-rich with Co contents of 2% to 4%.
To date, such semi-massive and massive sulphides have not been found in abundance at the Lac Brulé site. However, the many petrographic and structural similarities between the two sites, coupled with the results from very preliminary exploration on Lac Brulé, demonstrate that they are very similar magmatic systems, increasing the probability of a significant discovery.
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SRQ RESOURCES INC.
Management's discussion and analysis for the year ended December 31, 2025

Figure 8: Massive Sulphide Sample from Renzy Containing Pyroxene and Olivine Inclusions The sulphides are composed of pyrrhotite (Po), chalcopyrite (Cp,) and cobalt-rich pentlandite $(\mathrm{Ni} = 35.5$ to $36.4\mathrm{wt}\%$ . $\mathrm{Co} = 2.5$ to $4\mathrm{wt}\%)$ Magnetite and ilmenite crystals complete the parageneses.


OTHER EXPLORATION AREAS
SRQ also owns an additional 560 claims on several groups of claims in good standing (Table 2 & Figure 9).
SRQ RESOURCES INC.
Management's discussion and analysis for the year ended December 31, 2025
Table 2: SRQ's projects and claims in Quebec Province
| Projects | Owner | Percentage | # claims | Size Ha | SNRC |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pontiac East | |||||
| Lac Brulé | SRQ Resources | 100 | 691 | 39,760 | 31K14 |
| Lac Brennan | SRQ Resources | 100 | 42 | 2,480 | 31K10 |
| Pontiac West | |||||
| Lac Cabazie | SRQ Resources | 100 | 25 | 1,482 | 31L08 |
| Duncan | SRQ Resources | 100 | 18 | 1,064 | 31K12 |
| Lac Dumoine | SRQ Resources | 100 | 328 | 19,040 | 31L16 |
| Lac Jim | SRQ Resources | 100 | 21 | 1,178 | 31F16 |
| Northfield | SRQ Resources | 100 | 31 | 1,843 | 31J04 |
| Picanoc | SRQ Resources | 100 | 11 | 658 | 31F16 |
| Fosse du Labrador | |||||
| Redcliff | SRQ Resources | 100 | 84 | 3,948 | 24C15 |
| 1,251 | 71,453 |


Figure 9: SRQ group of exploration claims in the province of Quebec.
The exploration programs and technical disclosure for the Corporation are designed, reviewed and approved by Marc-Antoine Audet, P. Geo, PhD, President and Chief Executive Officer of the Corporation who is a 'qualified person' ("QP"), as defined by National Instrument 43-101, Standards for Disclosure for Mineral Projects ("NI 43-101").
SRQ RESOURCES INC.
Management's discussion and analysis for the year ended December 31, 2025
SELECTED FINANCIAL INFORMATION
Going concern assumption and liquidity risk
Based on the information available to date, the Corporation has not yet determined whether its mineral properties contain economically recoverable reserves.
The financial statements have been prepared using IFRS Accounting Standards applicable to a going concern, which presumes the Corporation will continue its operations for the foreseeable future and will be able to realize its assets and discharge its liabilities and commitments in the ordinary course of business for the foreseeable future. The use of these principles may not be appropriate. The Corporation is in its early stages, and as is common with similar corporations, it raises financing for its exploration and evaluation activities. As at December 31, 2025, the Corporation has an equity of $1,027,007 and a working capital of $973,134, including cash and cash equivalents of $496,853. To date, the Corporation has financed its cash requirements primarily equity financing. The Corporation's ability to continue as a going concern is subject to its ability to raise additional financing. The Corporation's discretionary activities do have some scope for flexibility in terms of the amount and timing of expenditures, and to a certain extent, expenditures may be adjusted accordingly.
While management has been successful in securing financing since its inception, there can be no assurance it will be able to do so in the future, that such sources of funding will be available to the Corporation or that they will be available on terms acceptable to the Corporation. These circumstances indicate the existence of material uncertainties that may cast significant doubt upon the Corporation's ability to continue as a going concern.
If management is unable to obtain new funding, the Corporation may have to rationalize or reprioritize its activities and ultimately be unable to continue its operations, and amounts realized for assets might be less than amounts reflected in the financial statements.
FINANCIAL POSITION ANALYSIS
| December 31, 2025 | December 31, 2024 | December 31, 2023 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| $ | $ | $ | |
| Total assets | 1,084,895 | 567,095 | 2,343,968 |
| Total liabilities | 57,888 | 116,167 | 323,885 |
| Total equity | 1,027,007 | 450,928 | 2,020,083 |
| Working capital* | 973,134 | 393,922 | 1,951,821 |
*Working capital is a measure of current assets less current liabilities.
ASSETS
Total assets at December 31, 2025 were $1,084,895 compared to $567,095 at December 31, 2024, an increase of $517,800 mainly due to an increase in tax credits receivable of $421,960 and in cash and cash equivalents of $88,948 following the March 2025 private placement.
LIABILITIES
Total liabilities at December 31, 2025 were $57,888 compared to $116,167 at December 31, 2024, a decrease of $58,279, mainly due to a decrease in accounts payable and accrued liabilities of $29,664 and in lease liabilities of $28,615.
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SRQ RESOURCES INC.
Management's discussion and analysis for the year ended December 31, 2025
EQUITY
At December 31, 2025, the Corporation had an equity balance of $1,027,007 compared to $450,928 at December 31, 2024, an increase of $576,079, mainly due to the issuance of common shares and warrants following the March 2025 private placement and the increase in stock-based compensation of $166,916, offset by the increase in accumulated net deficit of $1,727,677.
OPERATING RESULTS ANALYSIS
| Three-month period ended December 31, | 2025 | Year ended December 31, 2024 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 2024 | |||
| $ | $ | $ | $ | |
| Revenues | - | - | - | - |
| Net loss | 71,649 | 260,562 | 1,727,677 | 1,789,183 |
| Net loss per share | 0.00 | 0.01 | 0.04 | 0.06 |
THREE-MONTH PERIOD ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2025 COMPARED TO THE THREE-MONTH PERIOD ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2024
For the three-month period ended December 31, 2025, the Corporation recorded a net loss of $71,649 compared to $260,562 for the same period in 2024, a decrease of $188,913.
Exploration and evaluation expenses decreased by $271,423 from the same period in 2024, mainly due to a decrease in exploration expenses attributed to the Lac Brulé property by $55,003 related to timing of exploration campaign, and an increase in tax credits by $209,533.
General and administrative expenses increased by $51,427 from the same period in 2024, mainly due to an increase in professional and consulting fees by $54,588.
Other income variation is mostly comprised of flow through liability amortization of $44,461 and $13,378 in interest revenue.
YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2025 COMPARED TO THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2024
For the year ended December 31, 2025, the Corporation recorded a net loss of $1,727,677 compared to $1,789,183 for the same period in 2024, a decrease of $61,506.
Exploration and evaluation expenses decreased by $22,861 from the same period in 2024, mainly due to an increase in exploration expenses attributed to the Lac Brulé property by $498,113, offset by an increase in tax credits by $505,993.
General and administrative expenses decreased by $47,518 from the same period in 2024, mainly due to a decrease in salaries and benefits by $52,978, in share-based compensation by $44,122, in general and other expenses by $19,116, in investor relation and filing fees by $22,504, partially offset by an increase in professional and consulting fees by $87,199.
Other income variation is mostly comprised of flow through liability amortization of $17,443 and interest revenue of $8,570.
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SRQ RESOURCES INC.
Management's discussion and analysis for the year ended December 31, 2025
CASH FLOWS ANALYSIS
| Three-month periods ended December 31, | Years ended December 31, | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 2024 | 2025 | 2024 | |
| $ | $ | $ | $ | |
| Cash generated (required) by operating activities | (96,371) | 14,123 | (2,121,250) | (1,272,232) |
| Cash required by investing activities | - | - | (39,052) | (7,429) |
| Cash generated (required) by financing activities | - | (9,746) | 2,249,250 | (48,729) |
THREE-MONTH PERIOD ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2025 COMPARED TO THE THREE-MONTH PERIOD ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2024
Operating Activities
For the three-month period ended December 31, 2025, operating activities required cash flows of $96,371 compared to generating $14,123 for the same period in 2024, an increase of cash consumption of $110,494. The variation is due to the change in net loss after adjustments of items not affecting cash, which went from requiring cash flows of $238,834 in Q4 2024 to requiring $15,790 in Q4 2025 and by the variation in non-cash working capital items which went from generating $252,957 in Q4 2024 to requiring $80,581 in Q4 2025.
Investing Activities
For the three-month period ended December 31, 2025 and 2024, there were no investing activities.
Financing Activities
For the three-month period ended December 31, 2025, lease liabilities requiring net cash flows of $nil compared to requiring $9,746 for the same period in 2024.
YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2025 COMPARED TO THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2024
Operating Activities
For the year ended December 31, 2025, operating activities required cash flows of $2,121,250 compared to $1,272,232 for the same period in 2024, an increase of cash consumption of $849,018. The variation is due to the change in non-cash working capital items which went from generating cash flows of $407,580 in 2024 to requiring $461,649 in 2025.
Investing Activities
For the year ended December 31, 2025 and 2024, investing activities are related to small field equipment purchases.
Financing Activities
For the year ended December 31, 2025, issuance of common shares and warrants from the March 2025 private placement generated $2,371,393, offset by share issuance costs of $92,905 and lease liabilities requiring net cash flows of $29,238.
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SRQ RESOURCES INC.
Management's discussion and analysis for the year ended December 31, 2025
QUARTERLY RESULTS TRENDS
The operating results are presented in the following table:
| Dec 31, 2025 | Sep 30, 2025 | Jun 30, 2025 | Mar 31, 2025 | Dec 31, 2024 | Sep 30, 2024 | Jun 30, 2024 | Mar 31, 2024 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $ | $ | $ | $ | $ | $ | $ | $ | |
| Revenues | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| Net loss | 71,649 | 720,553 | 584,666 | 350,809 | 260,562 | 334,586 | 785,400 | 408,635 |
| Net loss per share | 0.00 | 0.02 | 0.01 | 0.01 | 0.01 | 0.01 | 0.03 | 0.01 |
RELATED PARTIES TRANSACTIONS
During the years ended December 31, 2025 and 2024, the following related party transactions occurred in the normal course of operations:
Lease payments, exploration and evaluation expenses and general and administrative expenses of $101,760 (2024 - $57,705) to Sama Resources Inc, a corporation of which the Corporation's President and Chief Executive Officer is also the President and Chief Executive Officer. As at December 31, 2025, $nil was due to that corporation ($nil - December 31, 2024).
REMUNERATION OF KEY MANAGEMENT PERSONNEL
Key management personnel are the members of the Board of Directors, and executive officers of the Corporation. During the years ended December 31, 2025 and 2024, the remuneration awarded to key management personnel is as follows:
| Year ended December 31, | ||
|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 2024 | |
| $ | $ | |
| Salaries and benefits | - | 30,000 |
| Consulting and professional fees | 220,000 | 190,000 |
| Share-based compensation | 140,681 | 192,312 |
| 360,681 | 412,312 |
TERMINATION AND CHANGE OF CONTROL PROVISIONS
Certain agreements between the executive team and the Corporation contain termination without cause and change of control provisions. Assuming that these agreements would be terminated without cause during the year ending December 31, 2026, the total amounts payable in respect of severance would amount to $440,000. If a change of control would occur during the year ending December 31, 2026, the total amounts payable in respect of severance, if elected by the executive members, would amount to $440,000.
COMMITMENTS
The Corporation has no outstanding commitments.
SRQ RESOURCES INC.
Management's discussion and analysis for the year ended December 31, 2025
OUTSTANDING SHARE DATA
| Number of Shares Outstanding (Diluted) | |
|---|---|
| SRQ outstanding shares as of March 31, 2026 | 46,095,650 |
| Shares reserved for issuance pursuant to stock options outstanding | 3,375,000 |
| Shares reserved for issuance pursuant to warrants outstanding | 15,091,892 |
| 64,562,542 |
As at the date of this MD&A, the Corporation had outstanding stock options enabling holders to acquire shares of the Corporation as follows:
| Expiration date | Number outstanding | Number exercisable | Exercise price $ |
|---|---|---|---|
| September 18, 2033 | 1,945,000 | 1,945,000 | 0.27 |
| January 24, 2035 | 1,430,000 | 715,000 | 0.13 |
| 3,375,000 | 2,660,000 |
As at the date of this MD&A, the Corporation had outstanding warrants enabling holders to acquire common shares of the Corporation as follows:
| Expiration date | Number | Exercise price $ |
|---|---|---|
| March 24, 2027 | 15,091,892 | 0.18 |
| 15,091,892 | 0.18 |
OFF-BALANCE SHEET ARRANGEMENTS
The Corporation has no off-balance sheet arrangements.
CONFLICTS OF INTEREST
The Corporation's directors and officers may serve as directors and/or officers, or may be associated with, other reporting companies, or have significant shareholdings in other public companies. To the extent that such other companies may participate in business or asset acquisitions, dispositions or ventures in which the Corporation may participate, the directors and officers of the Corporation may have a conflict of interest in negotiating and concluding terms respecting the transaction. If a conflict of interest arises, the Corporation will follow the provisions of the Canada Business Corporations Act (the Corporations Act) dealing with conflict of interest. These provisions state that where a director is in such a conflict, that director must, at a meeting of the Corporation's directors, disclose his or her interest and refrain from voting on the matter unless otherwise permitted by the Corporations Act. In accordance with the federal laws of Canada, the directors and officers of the Corporation are required to act honestly, in good faith, and in the best interests of the Corporation.
MATERIAL ACCOUNTING POLICIES
The preparation of financial statements in conformity with IFRS Accounting Standards requires management to apply accounting policies and make estimates and assumptions that affect amounts reported in the financial statements and accompanying notes. There is full disclosure of the Corporation's material accounting policies in Note 2 and Note 3 of the audited financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2025.
SRQ RESOURCES INC.
Management's discussion and analysis for the year ended December 31, 2025
ESTIMATES, JUDGMENTS AND ASSUMPTIONS
The preparation of the financial statements in conformity with IFRS Accounting Standards requires management to make judgments, estimates and assumptions that affect the application of accounting policies and the reported amounts of assets, liabilities, income and expenses. Significant changes in the underlying assumptions could result in significant changes to these estimates. Consequently, management reviews these estimates on a regular basis. Revisions to accounting estimates are recognized in the period in which the estimates are revised and in any future periods affected. Information about these significant judgments, assumptions and estimates that have the most significant effect on the recognition and measurement of assets, liabilities, income and expenses are disclosed in Note 3 of the audited financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2025.
RISKS RELATED TO FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS
Readers are invited to refer to Note 13 of the audited financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2025 for a full description of these risks.
RISKS AND UNCERTAINTIES
The Corporation is in the business of acquiring and exploring mineral properties. It is exposed to a number of risks and uncertainties that are common to other mineral exploration companies in the same business. The industry is capital intensive at all stages and is subject to variations in commodity prices, market sentiment, exchange rates for currency, inflation and other risks. The Corporation will rely mainly on equity financing to fund exploration activities on its mineral properties.
The risks and uncertainties described in this section are not inclusive of all the risks and uncertainties to which the Corporation may be subject.
EARLY STAGE – NEED FOR ADDITIONAL FUNDS
The Corporation has no history of profitable operations and its present business is at an early stage. As such, the Corporation is subject to many risks common to other companies in the same business, including under-capitalization, cash shortages and limitations with respect to personnel, financial and other resources and the lack of revenues. There is no assurance that the Corporation will be successful in achieving a return on shareholders' investment and the likelihood of success must be considered in light of its early stage of operations.
EXPLORATION AND EVALUATION
Mineral exploration and evaluation is a speculative business, characterized by a number of significant risks including, among other things, unprofitable efforts resulting not only from the failure to discover mineral deposits, but also from finding mineral deposits that, though present, are of insufficient size and/or grade to return a profit from production.
All of the mineral claims to which the Corporation has a right to acquire an interest are in the exploration stages only and are without a known body of commercial ore. Upon discovery of a mineralized occurrence, several stages of exploration and assessment are required before its economic viability can be determined. Development of the subject mineral properties would follow only if favorable results are determined at each stage of assessment. Few precious and base metal deposits are ultimately developed into producing mines.
SUPPLIES, HEALTH AND INFRASTRUCTURE
The Corporation's property interests are often located in remote, undeveloped areas and the availability of infrastructures such as surface access, skilled labour, healthy labour, fuel and power at an economic cost cannot be assured. These are integral requirements for exploration, production and development facilities on mineral properties.
TITLE RISKS
Although the Corporation has exercised the usual due diligence with respect to determining title to properties in which it has a material interest, there is no guarantee that title to such properties will not be challenged or impugned. The
SRQ RESOURCES INC.
Management's discussion and analysis for the year ended December 31, 2025
Corporation's mineral property interest may be subject to prior unregistered agreements, transfers, or native claims, and title may be affected by undetected defects.
ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATIONS, PERMITS AND LICENSES
The Corporation's operations are subject to various laws and regulations governing the protection of the environment, exploration, development, production, taxes, labour standards, occupational health, waste disposal, safety and other matters. Environmental legislation in most countries provides restrictions and prohibitions on spills, releases or emissions of various substances produced in association with certain mining industry operations, such as seepage from tailings disposal areas, which would result in environmental pollution. A breach of such legislation may result in the imposition of fines and penalties. In addition, certain types of operations require the submission and approval of environmental impact statements. Environmental legislation is evolving in a direction of stricter standards and enforcement, and higher fines and penalties for non-compliance. Environmental assessments of proposed projects carry a heightened degree of responsibility for companies and their directors, officers and employees. The cost of compliance with changes in governmental regulations has the potential to reduce the profitability of operations. The Corporation intends to fully comply with all environmental regulations.
The Corporation believes that it is in compliance with all material laws and regulations which currently apply to its activities. However, there can be no assurance that all permits which the Corporation may require for its operations and exploration activities will be obtainable on reasonable terms or on a timely basis, or that such laws and regulations would not have an adverse effect on any mining project which the Corporation might undertake.
CLIMATE CHANGE
The Corporation has properties in Quebec, where environmental laws are in constant evolution. The government introduced or are contemplating regulatory changes in response to the potential impact of climate change, such as regulation relating to emission levels. If the current regulatory trend continues, this may result in increased costs directly or indirectly affecting the Corporation. In addition, the physical effect of climate change, such as extreme weather conditions, forest fires, natural disasters, resource shortages, changing sea levels and changing temperatures, could have an adverse financial impact on operations where these conditions occur, directly or indirectly impacting the business of the Corporation.
COMPETITION AND AGREEMENTS WITH OTHER PARTIES
The mining industry is intensely competitive in all its phases and the Corporation competes with other companies that have greater financial resources and technical capacity. Competition could adversely affect the Corporation's ability to acquire suitable properties or prospects in the future.
The Corporation may, in the future, be unable to meet its share of costs incurred under such agreements to which it is a party and it may have its interest in the properties subject to such agreements reduced as a result. Also, if other parties to such agreements do not meet their share of such costs, the Corporation may not be able to finance the expenditures required to complete recommended programs.
DEPENDENCE ON MANAGEMENT
The Corporation is very dependent upon the personal efforts and commitment of its existing management. To the extent that management's services would be unavailable for any reason, a disruption to the operations of the Corporation could result, and other persons would be required to manage and operate the Corporation.
INFORMATION SYSTEMS SECURITY THREATS
Although the Corporation has not experienced any material losses to date relating to cyber-attacks or other information security breaches, there can be no assurance that the Corporation will not incur such losses in the future. The Corporation's risk and exposure to these matters cannot be fully mitigated because of, among other things, the evolving nature of these threats. As a result, cyber security and the continued development and enhancement of controls, processes and practices designed to protect systems, computers, software, data and networks from attack, damage or unauthorized access is a priority. As cyber threats continue to evolve, the Corporation may be required to expend additional resources to continue to modify or enhance protective measures or to investigate and remediate any security vulnerabilities.
SRQ RESOURCES INC.
Management's discussion and analysis for the year ended December 31, 2025
OPERATING HAZARDS AND RISKS
Mining operations involve many risks which even a combination of experience, knowledge and careful evaluation may not be able to overcome. In the course of exploration, development and production of mineral properties, certain risks, and in particular unexpected or unusual geological operating conditions, including rock bursts, cave-ins, fires, flooding and earthquakes, may occur. Operations in which the Corporation has a direct or indirect interest will be subject to all the hazards and risks normally incidental to exploration, development and production of mineral deposits, any of which could result in damage to or destruction of mines and other producing facilities, damage to life and property, environmental damage and possible legal liability for any or all damage.
Although the Corporation maintains liability insurance in an amount which it considers adequate, the nature of these risks is such that liabilities could exceed policy limits, in which event the Corporation could incur significant costs that could have a materially adverse effect upon its financial conditions.
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