Filo Mining Corp. (‘Filo Mining’, or the ‘Company’) announced additional drill results from the Filo del Sol project in San Juan province, Argentina. Drillhole FSDH046 has returned the longest mineralized intersection on the project to date, was collared 200m to the east of FSDH032, and demonstrates strong mineralization to over 1,400m below surface. FSDH046 returned 676m at 0.92% CuEq (0.57% Cu; 0.34g/t Au; 11.3g/t Ag) from a depth of 380m within a broader interval of 1,378m at 0.71% CuEq (0.45% Cu; 0.29g/t Au; 6.1g/t Ag) from a depth of 77.7m. FSDH050, which was collared 90m to the south and 510m to the west of FSDH046, returned 200.8m at 0.60% CuEq (0.26% Cu; 0.28g/t Au; 16.2g/t Ag) from 276m. The hole ended in mineralization and was stopped due to drilling difficulties, with the final 20m averaging 0.61% CuEq (0.40% Cu; 0.28g/t Au; 1.3g/t Ag). The full intersection in FSDH046 lies completely outside of the current mineral resource, while FSDH050 is within it. Both of these holes were collared prior to drilling the high-grade zone intersected in hole FSDH041 and were not intended to follow up on that intersection. A total of 11,280m was completed in fifteen holes during the 2020/2021 field season. Drilling has now stopped for a short break while the Company prepares the drills and camp facilities for continuous, year-round field operations. Hole FSDH046 was collared on Section 9000N, 200m to the east of FSDH032 and drilled parallel to that hole, at an angle of -71 degrees towards the west. This hole is entirely outside of the currently defined resource and is the deepest hole drilled to date at 1570.7m. The hole was collared in strongly weathered and leached microdiorite and transitioned to rhyolite volcaniclastics at a depth of 78m which also corresponds to the transition from the leached to the mineralized zone. High-grade copper and gold mineralization starts at 380m along with quartz-alunite alteration and the hole continues in rhyolite, with primary textures obscured by intense alteration and strong stockwork veining, to a depth of 1,037m where there is a sharp transition to a porphyry intrusive. This porphyry section is fairly homogeneous, cut by several types of porphyry veins, and continues to 1,198m where it transitions to a brecciated, heterogeneous interval of mixed rhyolite, porphyry, granite and andesite. This mixed interval continues to 1,392m where there is a sharp contact with a second porphyry intrusive that continues to the end of the hole. This porphyry is cut by typical A, B and D veins, and shows remnant potassic alteration with copper and gold grades decreasing from the contact towards the bottom of the hole. Additional drilling is required to understand the size and geometry of this unit, which is currently interpreted as a typical late-mineral porphyry dyke. Intrusive dykes like this are common in this type of system, and the deposit remains open for expansion at depth. Hole FSDH050 was collared on section 8900N, 320m southwest of FSDH032, and drilled at an angle of -80 degrees towards the east to a final depth of 476.8m where it was ended due to drilling difficulties. This hole drilled through a mix of intensely altered rocks comprising volcaniclastics, breccias and mafic dykes up to 450m. Lithologies in this interval are difficult to identify due to the intense high-sulphidation alteration, which consists of steam-heated alteration up to 90m (indicating the uppermost level of the HS system) and intense quartz-alunite down to the bottom of the hole. From 450m to the end of the hole it intersects a strong quartz-alunite altered rhyolite, with quartz and quartz-sulphide veins and disseminated pyrite-covellite-chalcocite mineralization. Included in this interval is the Silver Zone, from 424 to 450m, which is manifested here by very fine grained sulphides in veinlets cutting strongly alunite-altered rhyolite averaging 97.7 g/t silver over the interval and including a 2.7m interval of 709 g/t silver. The hole ended in mineralization. Assay results for eleven of the fifteen holes drilled this season have now been released, with the remaining four to be provided as results are received. FSDH049 was drilled to a final depth of 515.3m, ending in mineralization, and was stopped as a result of drilling difficulties. Holes FSDH051 (765.1m), FSDH052 (152.0m) and FSDH053 (150.0m) were still underway at the end of May when camp operations were suspended for winterization and maintenance. These holes were left prepared for future re-entry, however, timeline for deepening these will be dependent on the Company's future drilling priorities. Drilling is expected to resume in August and is planned to continue without interruption as we transition to year-round operations. The Company plans to complete a resource update prior to the end of the year, which will incorporate data from the deep holes drilled since 2019, as well as several more to be completed in the late summer and fall.