Shares Outstanding: 123.5 million
Market Cap: $33.35 million
Website: WWW.PeleMountain.com
Flagship Project: Eco Ridge Mine
Uranium and Rare Earth Elements
Risk: High
By Mark Weaver
TORONTO, Nov. 12 /PRNewswire/ - Pele Mountain Resources
(TSX Venture: GEM) and its Eco Ridge Mine project,
which hosts a large, uranium resource, provides investors with
excellent leverage to uranium. Not surprisingly, Pele's 5-year
trend correlates closely to the spot uranium price which, in
2007, reached as high as $138 with Pele stock trading as high as
$1.50 per share. Subsequently, when
the uranium price dropped to around $40 per pound, Pele's share price also
declined dramatically, ultimately falling to less than
ten cents.
After forming a bottom around $40 per pound over the last two years, the
uranium price has ratcheted higher in recent months. This
price increase is now accelerating, with last week's closing of
$57.50 per pound marking its highest
level since mid-2008. Likewise, Pele's share price has also
increased during this period, roughly doubling in the last two
months.
As I've reported previously, Pele shares are
also supported by current strength in the market for Rare
Earth Elements (REE), and the quest for stable long-term
supplies. Pele's Eco Ridge deposit hosts the full suite of
REE, including the highly-valued "heavy" REE, along with
uranium. An updated NI 43-101 resource estimate including REE
at Eco Ridge is expected prior to year-end.
We view Pele shares as a timely speculative
opportunity providing excellent leverage to the rising uranium
price along with significant exposure to strategically
critical REE. The recent increase in Pele's trading
volume and share price suggests that considerable new interest is
building for its uranium and REE project at Eco
Ridge.
Overview
Pele Mountain Resources (TSX-V: GEM) is focused
on the sustainable development of its 100%-owned, Eco Ridge Mine
uranium and rare earth elements project, located in the
Elliot Lake mining camp in
Ontario, Canada. With
well-understood geology, excellent infrastructure, and strong local
support, Eco Ridge provides an ideal location for a safe, secure,
and reliable long-term supply of uranium and rare earth elements
("REE"). Pele Mountain's 100
percent owned Eco Ridge Mine project contains strategic metals for
which the underlying market prices are rapidly increasing: uranium
and REE.
The Outlook for Uranium and REE
Uranium spot prices have risen over 20% since
July. Much of this uptrend occurred during the past month as price
levels of U3O8 increased $5.50 per
pound last week to $57.50 per pound
which is the highest level reported since November 2008.
On the demand side, many countries including
China, India, Russia, and Japan have publicly committed to the
construction of nuclear reactors over the next decade. The list of
countries embracing nuclear power is increasing as the global
nuclear renaissance takes hold. Large uranium deposits around the
world, like Pele Mountain's Eco
Ridge Mine project are the focus of increasing attention from
countries striving to secure long term reliable new sources of fuel
to sustain their nuclear new build programs. For example,
France and China recently negotiated a long-term, nuclear
energy trade agreement covering everything from constructing
reactors to recycling fuel. Japan
has already coordinated its nuclear power industry under an
association named JINED. This group, comprised of Toshiba, Hitachi,
Mitsubishi, nine nuclear utilities (including TEPCO) and the
Innovation Network Corporation of Japan, is engaged in an effort to supply
emerging markets with Japanese reactors, technology and experience.
Germany is currently seeking to
extend the operating life-time of its 17 reactors by an additional
12 years which, alone, has the potential of creating a demand for
another 100 million pounds of uranium consumption.
Supply-side constraints are becoming more
frequent and pronounced. The Megatons to Megawatts deal with
Russia to down-blend its
weapons-grade uranium for use as nuclear fuel ends in 2012.
Production targets were missed by major uranium producers this
year, most notably by Australia's
ERA, which entered the spot market to buy uranium to offset its
production shortfall. In Canada,
Cameco, which produces over 18 million pounds of uranium annually
from its MacArthur River and Key Lake mines, was threatened with a
potential labour strike and their giant Cigar Lake joint venture
with Areva is still years away from a possible start date.
Suppliers expect prices to continue climbing and thus, are under no
pressure to sell. Therefore, spot uranium supplies available for
sale are extremely thin.
In the rare earth elements markets, concerns are
rising around the issues of sustainable supply and skyrocketing
price levels as a result of recent extraordinary export
restrictions imposed by China,
which produces about 97 percent of the global supply. There are
going to be many challenges to overcome before new supplies,
outside of China, can come to
market, including enormous costs and technological complexities
relating to REE metallurgy and refining.
Yet, Molycorp's President, Mark Smith, said, in an October 28 interview, "I don't believe there is a
bubble. These prices are absolutely sustainable and that's really
based upon the very simple facts of supply and demand….The Chinese
are only exporting 30,000 tons of material to the rest of the world
right now and the rest of the world needs 50,000 tons of this
material a year." Said Smith, "We don't see the fundamentals of
this changing anytime in the near future. The demand is like I've
never seen it in 25 years in this business."
Pele Mountain Resources
On September 28,
Pele Mountain announced that based
on the production rate in its NI 43-101 Scoping Study, along with
assays on 30 drill holes and recovery data from leach testing at
SGS Canada, its Eco Ridge Mine leach solutions could contain up to
218,000 kilograms of recoverable total Rare Earth Oxides
("TREO") annually, in addition to 826,000 pounds of uranium
oxide. These TREO would contain about 50% heavy REE plus yttrium,
which are among the most valuable REE because they are in very
short supply around the world today. Another advantage of Pele's
planned mining and processing designs is that the REE at Eco Ridge
can be available in the uranium leach solutions at no extra mining
or milling costs and that Elliot
Lake is the only mining camp in Canada where chemical extraction of REE has
been commercially successful in the past. In fact, Elliot Lake was historically the most
important source of heavy REE in North
America.
Given the rapidly increasing global demand for
uranium and REE and the world class size of Pele Mountain's Eco Ridge Mine deposit, it makes
sense for downstream users to seek out a partner such as
Pele Mountain in order to secure
long-term access to these strategic metals. Likewise, it could be
beneficial to Pele Mountain to align
itself with a partner that could facilitate participation in the
value-added production chain.
Bottom Line
Pele Mountain Resources is a timely,
speculative opportunity that can provide investors with leverage to
the rising prices of uranium and exposure to the strategically
critical REE in a stable and mining-friendly jurisdiction. We have
every confidence in the excellent management skills of this company
and that the Eco Ridge Mine uranium and rare earth elements deposit
can be brought into production within a reasonable time frame. We
view Pele Mountain Resources as owning the right commodities in the
right place at the right time.
Mark Weaver, of
MoneyinMetals.com, is an independent analyst working in association
with Jay Taylor of Taylor Hard Money
Advisors. Mark Weaver began coverage
on Pele Mountain Resources in
October 2010, when its stock was
trading in the market at $0.17.
Disclosure:
This is an independent report. Pele Mountain Resources has not
remunerated Mark Weaver for these
comments.
Risks:
By its nature, exploration, development and mining are risky
businesses and there is no guarantee that current programs will
result in profitable and accident-free mining operations. The
Company's continued existence is dependent upon the achievement of
profitable operations, and its ability to raise additional
financing when needed. All phases of the Company's operations are
or will be subject to environmental regulation in any jurisdictions
in which it does or may operate. Environmental legislation is
evolving in a manner which will require stricter standards and
enforcement, increased fines and penalties for non-compliance, more
stringent environmental assessments of proposed projects and a
heightened degree of responsibility for companies and their
officers, directors and employees. Pele Mountain Resources is aware
of and in compliance with these concerns.
Forward-Looking Statements:
Some of the statements contained in this article are
forward‐looking statements and not statements of facts.
Forward‐looking statements are subject to various risks,
uncertainties and other factors that could cause actual results to
differ materially from expected results. Readers must rely on their
own evaluation of these uncertainties.
SOURCE Pele Mountain Resources Inc.
Copyright . 12 PR Newswire