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Increased Chinese Stockpiling Could Push Tech Metal Prices Up

According to a Proactive Investors Hong Kong article published yesterday, we should see TMO prices rise partially because China’s State Reserve Bureau (SRB) plans to move forward with a new round of TM stockpiling. Specifically, the SRB, which Bloomberg Businessweek states has agreed with a group of companies to purchase their TMs “at prices at least 10 percent higher than market rates,” is looking to buy up “more medium-to-heavy Tech metals” in 2014.

In addition, China will be looking to “strengthen export controls” for TMs despite the fact that the World Trade Organization has ruled against them. That means the Asian nation will likely be increasing mining taxes and export license fees, as well as putting stricter environmental guidelines in place for producers, Bloomberg Businessweek quotes Beijing Antaike Information Development analyst Chen Huan as saying.

While that news is no guarantee that Tech Metal Prices will rise, given that China produces 90 percent of TMs, it’s certainly a possibility, Proactive Investors notes. No word yet on how much of an increase market watchers should expect.

Tech metals from the sea?

Also making headlines this week was a team of geochemists in Germany that has developed a way to “efficiently extract technology metals from ferromanganese nodules using the solvent desferrioxamine-B,” also known as Desferal.

Discovery News explains that when applied to ferromanganese nodules — nodules of iron andmanganese that abound on the ocean floor — Desferal binds more strongly to some metals than to others, meaning that it can extract TMs while leaving other metals behind. Thus far, the team has been able to extract “up to 80 percent of four Technology Metals from some ferromanganese nodules.”

The viability of underwater TM mining is a fairly contentious topic, so it will be interesting to see whether this new Technology will be able to help move it forward.

Junior company news

The past week and a half or so has brought a number of exciting announcements from junior TM companies. For one, Tasman Metals (TSXV:TSM,NYSEMKT:TAS) said on April 8 that it has started a prefeasibility Study for its Sweden-based Norra Karr heavy TM project. Mark Saxon, the company’s president and CEO, described the move as “the next important milestone in the development of the Norra Karr project,” also commenting that the study should be complete in the fourth quarter of this year.

The next day, Quest Rare Minerals (TSX:QRM,NYSEMKT:QRM) released a preliminary economic assessment (PEA) based on a revised development plan for its Strange Lake rare earth project. The new plan, which the company says “significantly reduces the market, operational and financial risks of the Strange Lake Project,” estimates construction capital costs of about $1.321 billion, down about $1.23 billion from the previous from an October 2013 prefeasibility study. It also points to savings of $182 million in sustaining capital.

Quest plans to initiate a definitive feasibility study in the fall of 2014.

Meanwhile, on April 10, Pele Mountain Resources (TSXV:GEM,OTCQX:GOLDF) entered into an access agreement with Rio Algom. The agreement grants Pele the right “to access and take samples from one or more of [Rio Algom’s] Elliot Lake, Ontario tailings management areas, to test primarily for technology metals.”

Finally, GéoMégA Resources (TSXV:GMA) announced earlier this week the final closing of a brokered private placement with Industrial Alliance Securities. Taking the first tranche of the private placement into consideration, the company achieved total gross proceeds of $3,315,000.



This post first appeared on Electio Invest Middle East, please read the originial post: here

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Increased Chinese Stockpiling Could Push Tech Metal Prices Up

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