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Tartisan #Nickel $TN.ca – Nickel hits three-month peak on Indonesia concerns $ROX.ca $FF.ca $EDG.ca $AGL.ca $ANZ.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 9:00 PM on Sunday, July 14th, 2019

SPONSOR: Tartisan Nickel (TN:CSE)  Kenbridge Property has a measured and indicated resource of 7.14 million tonnes at 0.62% nickel, 0.33% copper. Tartisan also has interests in Peru, including a 20 percent equity stake in Eloro Resources and 2 percent NSR in their La Victoria property. Click her for more information

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Nickel hits three-month peak on Indonesia concerns

  • Nickel prices touched their highest in three months on Friday on worries that major producer Indonesia will resume an export ban on ore in 2022
  • Indonesia relaxed the ban on nickel ore in 2017, but said at the time that it would last only five years and that exports would be restricted again in 2022

Eric Onstad

LONDON — Nickel prices touched their highest in three months on Friday on worries that major producer Indonesia will resume an export ban on ore in 2022.

Indonesia relaxed the ban on nickel ore in 2017, but said at the time that it would last only five years and that exports would be restricted again in 2022.

Analyst Colin Hamilton at BMO Capital Markets in London said many people had been skeptical that the full ban would be reimposed, and a media report about sticking to the ban in 2022 created jitters in the market.

“Of course that wouldn’t affect today’s availability, but we’ve always been heavily dependent on Indonesia in this nickel market,” Hamilton said.

“If we were to see Indonesia restrict availability of their ore then it would tighten the market quicker than we’re factoring in.”

Most analysts expect rising demand for nickel in electric vehicles to create shortages in coming years.

Benchmark nickel on the London Metal Exchange was up 0.8% at $13,230 a tonne by 1400 GMT after earlier hitting $13,325, the strongest since April 8.

* COPPER IMPORTS: Chinese imports of unwrought copper fell 27.2% year on year in June as a slowdown in the world’s second-biggest economy continued to weigh on demand for the metal. Shipments of ores and concentrates slid 16.5%, data showed.

“That probably reflects availability more than anything else. Just look at the Chilean and Peruvian (mine output) data,” said Hamilton, referring to the fall in ore imports.

“There’s no tightness at the refined end of the market yet, but there’s a raw material constraint and you’d expect it to flow through the chain eventually.”

* CHINA TRADE: Also weighing on the metals market was disappointing wider trade data from top metals consumer China.

China’s overall exports fell in June as the United States ramped up trade pressure, while imports shrank more than expected, pointing to further weakness in the world’s second-largest economy and slackening global growth.

* DOLLAR: The dollar index pared losses after U.S. producer prices rose slightly in June, pointing to moderate inflation. A weaker dollar often boosts metals prices, making them cheaper for buyers using other currencies.

* TIN SPREAD: LME cash tin’s discount to the three-month contract moved to $48 a tonne, the strongest since February 2017, against a premium of $230 in mid-June. This follows a sharp rise in LME tin inventories, evidence of ample supplies of the metal.

* PRICES: Three-month LME copper fell 0.4% to $5,933 tonne, giving up gains after touching $5,998, the highest since July 1.

Aluminum slipped 0.3% to $1,822 a tonne, zinc shed 0.3% to $2,420, lead added 0.2% to $1,977 and tin gave up 1.3% to $18,105.

Source: https://business.financialpost.com/pmn/business-pmn/nickel-hits-three-month-peak-on-indonesia-concerns

Tartisan #Nickel $TN.ca – Surge in #battery #nickel use is more bad news for cobalt price $ROX.ca $FF.ca $EDG.ca $AGL.ca $ANZ.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 2:15 PM on Thursday, July 11th, 2019

SPONSOR: Tartisan Nickel (TN:CSE)  Kenbridge Property has a measured and indicated resource of 7.14 million tonnes at 0.62% nickel, 0.33% copper. Tartisan also has interests in Peru, including a 20 percent equity stake in Eloro Resources and 2 percent NSR in their La Victoria property. Click her for more information

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Surge in battery nickel use is more bad news for cobalt price

  • Battery metals tracker Adamas Intelligence says electric vehicle manufacturers deployed 57% more nickel in passenger EV batteries in May this year compared to 2018.

The Toronto-based research company, which tracks EV registrations and battery chemistries in more than 80 countries says the nickel metal equivalent used in lithium-ion batteries (primarily in the form of nickel sulphate) increased by 69% whereas the amount used in nickel metal hydride (NiMH) batteries (primarily in the form of nickel hydroxide and AB5 nickel-REE alloy) increased 26%.

The deployment of nickel is outpacing the growth of the overall EV battery market

The deployment of nickel also outpaced the growth of the EV market overall. In May this year, total passenger EV battery capacity deployed globally was 48% higher year-on-year according to Adamas data.

Nickel’s inroads is due to shifting chemistries of nickel-cobalt-manganese (NCM) battery cathodes.

First generation NCM111 batteries had a chemical composition of 1 part nickel, 1 part cobalt and 1 part manganese, but NCM batteries with higher nickel content (622 and 523 chemistries) are quickly becoming the standard in China, which is responsible for half the world’s electric car sales, and a much greater proportion of EV battery manufacture.

With worries about security of supply of cobalt persisting, the industry is now fast moving towards even higher nickel content with the market share of NCM811 increasing to 2% worldwide and 4% in China in May, a doubling of market share in just one month.

Adamas points out that in China the increased deployment coincided with  the launch of a number of new EV models in China using NCM811 cells from battery leader CATL.

World number one carmaker Volkswagen is spending more than $50 billion on batteries to start mass producing EVs by mid-2023 and the company announced earlier this month that from 2021 it would use the NCM811 composition.

Nickel touched $13,000 a tonne for the first time since April on Wednesday. The price is up just over 19% in 2019 as the EV boom creates additional demand and primary use of the metal today – stainless steel production – continues to grow.

Cobalt is now worth $28,000 a tonne after peaking at $95,000 little more than a year ago as miners in the Congo – responsible for two-thirds of output – ramp up production.

Source: https://www.mining.com/surge-in-battery-nickel-use-is-more-bad-news-for-cobalt-price/

Tartisan #Nickel $TN.ca – The U.S. and Europe Are Getting More Anxious About #EV #Battery Shortages $ROX.ca $FF.ca $EDG.ca $AGL.ca $ANZ.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 10:24 AM on Monday, July 8th, 2019

SPONSOR: Tartisan Nickel (TN:CSE)  Kenbridge Property has a measured and indicated resource of 7.14 million tonnes at 0.62% nickel, 0.33% copper. Tartisan also has interests in Peru, including a 20 percent equity stake in Eloro Resources and 2 percent NSR in their La Victoria property. Click her for more information

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TN: CSE
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The U.S. and Europe Are Getting More Anxious About EV Battery Shortages

  • Clean TeQ sees automakers, suppliers wary over nickel, cobalt
  • More than 12 parties reviewing stake in Sunrise project: CEO

By David Stringer

Automakers to trading houses from North America to Europe are becoming more concerned about future supply shortages of key materials needed for electric vehicle batteries as spending on new production soars, according to the developer of a $1.5 billion project in Australia.

More than a dozen parties have now expressed interest in taking up as much as a 50% stake in Clean TeQ Holdings Ltd.’s Sunrise nickel-cobalt-scandium project, Chief Executive Officer Sam Riggall said Monday in an interview. They include companies in regions that until recently had shown less impetus to tie up raw material supplies.

“It’s dawning on North America and Europe that there’s a raw materials issue that needs to be addressed here,” Riggall said by phone. “For the previous two years, I’ve been wearing out a lot of shoe leather and banging on a lot of doors trying to get interest in Europe and North America with very little success. In the last six months things have changed quite dramatically.”

Volkswagen AG in May picked Sweden’s Northvolt AB as a partner to start production of battery cells for electric cars, while the German and French governments have pledged funding and political support for efforts to spur a European battery manufacturing industry. In the U.S., the number of battery electric models available to consumers is forecast to double by the end of 2021, according to BloombergNEF.

Melbourne-based Clean TeQ, which said last month it had appointed Macquarie Group Ltd. to run a process to identify a partner, is seeking final offers for a stake in the Sunrise project by the end of September, and will aim to complete any sale by the end of the year, according to Riggall.

China’s grip on lithium-ion battery cell manufacturing is forecast to loosen through 2025, as new capacity is added close to demand centers in the U.S. and Europe, BNEF said in a May report.

Battery Shift

New plants will boost lithium-ion battery cell manufacturing in Europe

Source: BloombergNEF

The scale of planned investments in electric lineups means both automakers and related industries in Europe and North America are focusing on how to secure future supplies of battery-grade nickel — and also on ensuring there’s sufficient cobalt after the market tightens from about 2021 to 2022, Riggall said. “Their minds are being forced to turn to raw materials,” he said. “They are seeing significant risks on that side of the business.”

There’s a looming shortage of nickel sulfate, the material used for battery products, with demand forecast to outstrip planned new capacity, BNEF said in a July 2 report. Cobalt demand may also top global supply from about 2025, according to the note.

Cobalt prices have tumbled since early 2018 on new supply from incumbent producers in the Democratic Republic of Congo, and as some battery makers seek to reduce the amount of the metal in their packs. Nickel has declined about 11% on the London Metal Exchange in the past year.

Clean TeQ is targeting commerical production at the Sunrise project, with a forecast mine life of more than 40 years, from 2022, Riggall said.

Source: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-07-08/u-s-europe-getting-more-anxious-about-ev-battery-supply-crunch

CLIENT FEATURE: Tartisan Nickel $TN.ca Kenbridge Property Hosts M&I Resource of 7.14 Million Tonnes at 0.62% #Nickel, 0.33% #Copper $ROX.ca $FF.ca $EDG.ca $AGL.ca $ANZ.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 10:47 AM on Wednesday, July 3rd, 2019

Investment Highlights

  • Kenbridge property has a measured and indicated resource of 7.14 million tonnes at 0.62% nickel, 0.33% copper
  • 17.5 (21.8 fully diluted) percent equity stake in Eloro Resources and 2 percent NSR in their La Victoria property
  • Signed Binding Letter of Intent to Purchase Sill Lake Lead-Silver Property, Ontario Read More

Kenbridge Ni Project (ON, Canada)

  • Advanced  stage  deposit  remains open  in  three  directions,  is  equipped with a 623m  deep  shaft  and  has  never  been  mined. 
  • Preliminary  Economic Assessment completed and updated returned robust project 
    economics and operating costs including  a  NPV  of  C$253M  and  cash costs of US$3.47/lb of nickel net of  
    copper credits.
  • Plans for Kenbridge include updating PEA, advancing the project through to feasibility and exploring the open mineralization at depth

Sill Lake Silver-Lead property, Sault Ste. Marie Mining Division, Ontario.

  • Closed the acquisition of the past-producing Sill Lake Silver-Lead property, Vankoughnet Twp, Sault Ste. Marie Mining Division, Ontario.
  • Acquisition includes 13 single-cell mining claims and four boundary-cell claims that total some 372.8 hectares.
  • Lead-zinc-silver mineralization was discovered at Sill Lake in 1892; since that time sufficient works have been completed so as to define a (historical) measured and indicated resource of 112,751 tonnes of 134 g/t silver, 0.62% lead, and 0.21% zinc.
  • A 60 g/t cutoff for silver was used, with no cutoff used for base metals content.
  • Some 7,000 tonnes was exploited from the Sill Lake Project to produce a lead-silver concentrate which was sold to nearby smelters.

FULL DISCLOSURE: Tartisan Nickel Corp. is an advertising client of AGORA Internet Relations Corp.

CLIENT FEATURE: Tartisan Nickel $TN.ca Kenbridge Property Hosts M&I Resource of 7.14 Million Tonnes at 0.62% Nickel, 0.33% Copper $ROX.ca $FF.ca $EDG.ca $AGL.ca $ANZ.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 9:00 PM on Sunday, June 23rd, 2019

Investment Highlights

  • Kenbridge property has a measured and indicated resource of 7.14 million tonnes at 0.62% nickel, 0.33% copper
  • 17.5 (21.8 fully diluted) percent equity stake in Eloro Resources and 2 percent NSR in their La Victoria property
  • Signed Binding Letter of Intent to Purchase Sill Lake Lead-Silver Property, Ontario Read More

Kenbridge Ni Project (ON, Canada)

  • Advanced  stage  deposit  remains open  in  three  directions,  is  equipped with a 623m  deep  shaft  and  has  never  been  mined. 
  • Preliminary  Economic Assessment completed and updated returned robust project 
    economics and operating costs including  a  NPV  of  C$253M  and  cash costs of US$3.47/lb of nickel net of  
    copper credits.
  • Plans for Kenbridge include updating PEA, advancing the project through to feasibility and exploring the open mineralization at depth

FULL DISCLOSURE: Tartisan Nickel Corp. is an advertising client of AGORA Internet Relations Corp.

Tartisan Nickel Corp. $TN.ca Completes Acquisition of Sill Lake Silver-Lead Property, Sault Ste. Marie Mining Division, Ontario $ROX.ca $FF.ca $EDG.ca $AGL.ca $ANZ.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 7:12 AM on Monday, June 17th, 2019
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  • Company has closed the acquisition of the past-producing Sill Lake Silver-Lead property, Vankoughnet Twp, Sault Ste. Marie Mining Division, Ontario.
  • Sill Lake acquisition includes 13 single-cell mining claims and four boundary-cell claims that total some 372.8 hectares.

TORONTO, CANADA / June 17, 2019 / Tartisan Nickel Corp. (CSE: TN, US-OTC-TTSRF FSE: A2D) (“Tartisan”, or the “Company”) is pleased to announce that the Company has closed the acquisition of the past-producing Sill Lake Silver-Lead property, Vankoughnet Twp, Sault Ste. Marie Mining Division, Ontario.

The Sill Lake acquisition includes 13 single-cell mining claims and four boundary-cell claims that total some 372.8 hectares. Lead-zinc-silver mineralization was discovered at Sill Lake in 1892; since that time sufficient works have been completed so as to define a (historical) measured and indicated resource of 112,751 tonnes of 134 g/t silver, 0.62% lead, and 0.21% zinc. A 60 g/t cutoff for silver was used, with no cutoff used for base metals content. Some 7,000 tonnes was exploited from the Sill Lake Project to produce a lead-silver concentrate which was sold to nearby smelters.

Consideration for the acquisition paid to the Vendor, Klondike Bay Resources, comprised a cash payment of C$15,000; the issuance of 700,000 shares and a 2% net smelter royalty. One percent of the net smelter return may be repurchased by Tartisan Nickel Corp for $250,000.00.

Tartisan CEO Mr. Mark Appleby noted, “The Sill Lake Silver-Lead Deposit joins the Kenbridge Nickel-Copper-Cobalt Deposit in the Tartisan portfolio as brownfield development projects with excellent greenfield exploration potential.”

Tartisan will now move to visit the Sill Lake Silver-Lead Project to take confirmation samples of exposed vein material as well as surface structural mapping and evaluation of surface infrastructure. In addition, the Company is reviewing an opportunity to evaluate surface and shallow mineralization across the entire Sill Lake property as part of a satellite-based spectral analysis targeted to silver-lead mineralization.

About Tartisan Nickel Corp.

Tartisan Nickel Corp is a Canadian mineral exploration and development company which owns 100% of the Kenbridge Nickel-Copper-Cobalt Project in Ontario holding historical resources of 97.8 million lbs of nickel and 47 million pounds of copper. As well, the Company owns 100% of the Sill Lake Silver-Lead Deposit, holding historical resources of 0.485 million ounces of silver; 1.5 million lbs of lead, and 0.5 million lbs of zinc.

In addition, the Company owns a 100% stake in the Don Pancho Zinc-Lead-Silver Project in Peru just 9 km from Trevali’s Santander mine and owns a 100% stake in the Ichuna Copper-Silver Project, also in Peru, contiguous to Buenaventura”s San Gabriel property. Tartisan also owns a significant equity stake (6 MM shares and 3 MM full warrants at 40c) in Eloro Resources Ltd, which is exploring the low-sulphidation epithermal La Victoria Gold/Silver Project in Ancash, Peru.

Tartisan Nickel Corp. common shares are listed on the Canadian Securities Exchange (CSE:TN, US-OTC-TTSRF, FSE A2D). Currently, there are 100,403,550 shares outstanding (103,103,550 fully diluted).

For further information, please contact Mr. D. Mark Appleby, President & CEO and a Director of the Company, at 416-804-0280 ([email protected]). Additional information about Tartisan can be found at the Company’s website at www.tartisannickel.com or on SEDAR at www.sedar.com.

Jim Steel MBA P.Geo. is the Qualified Person under NI 43-101 and has read and approved the technical content of this News Release.

This news release may contain forward-looking statements including but not limited to comments regarding the timing and content of upcoming work programs, geological interpretations, receipt of property titles, potential mineral recovery processes, etc. Forward-looking statements address future events and conditions and therefore, involve inherent risks and uncertainties. Actual results may differ materially from those currently anticipated in such statements.

The Canadian Securities Exchange (operated by CNSX Markets Inc.) has neither approved nor disapproved of the contents of this press release.

SOURCE: Tartisan Nickel Corp.



View source version on accesswire.com:
https://www.accesswire.com/548948/Tartisan-Nickel-Corp-Completes-Acquisition-of-Sill-Lake-Silver-Lead-Property-Sault-Ste-Marie-Mining-Division-Ontario

Tartisan #Nickel $TN.ca – Invest in #EVs now or regret later, Ni mart told #Nickel $ROX.ca $FF.ca $EDG.ca $AGL.ca $ANZ.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 1:46 PM on Thursday, June 6th, 2019

SPONSOR: Tartisan Nickel (TN:CSE)  Kenbridge Property has a measured and indicated resource of 7.14 million tonnes at 0.62% nickel, 0.33% copper. Tartisan also has interests in Peru, including a 20 percent equity stake in Eloro Resources and 2 percent NSR in their La Victoria property. Click her for more information

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TN: CSE
Fact Sheet
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Invest in EVs now or regret later, Ni mart told

  • Nickel market participants should invest in production for electric vehicle (EV) batteries soon or they will eventually regret not doing so, EV sector experts said at Fastmarkets’ 7th International Nickel Conference in Amsterdam on Wednesday June 5
  • EV market penetration will reach 22-30% between 2019 and 2030, according to Ken Hoffman, of management consultant McKinsey,

AMSTERDAM — Nickel market participants should invest in production for electric vehicle (EV) batteries soon or they will eventually regret not doing so, EV sector experts said at Fastmarkets’ 7th International Nickel Conference in Amsterdam on Wednesday June 5.

Panel experts believed the risk of not investing in nickel production was greater than choosing not to take that option because of their bullish prognosis for nickel demand and the three-month price of nickel on the London Metal Exchange.

EV market penetration will reach 22-30% between 2019 and 2030, according to Ken Hoffman, of management consultant McKinsey, and Thomas Hohne-Sparborth, of specialist consultant Roskill. This will be driven by cleaner, greener European regulations affecting the automotive sector.

But this will not be confined to Europe. EV demand is growing in Asia, with 2.1 million units sold in China alone in 2018 and a projected 3 million units to be sold in 2019. This would constitute a huge increase over 2012, when fewer than 50,000 units were sold, one panelist noted.

Indeed, EV sales in the first quarter of 2019 rose by 118% year on year to 254,000 units in China alone, with 500 factories in the country supporting EV production.

The EV panel experts also believe producers are on the verge of providing batteries with better energy density and vehicles with a 1,000km range, making them more desirable for consumers.

Battery production must increase to meet this demand and panelists indicated that nickel is the EV battery metal of choice. They forecast this will likely remain the case for the next five to seven years at least, leading to an increase in nickel demand, along with the price. 

“I am very bullish [on the price of nickel],” Hohne-Sparborth said. “Over the medium term, three to five years, you can get enough nickel units out of some active plants in Indonesia. Tsingshan [Holding’s Indonesian smelter on the island of Sulawesi] can come on-stream very quickly [and] $12,500-13,000 per tonne

[for nickel]

would be a good price incentive for such projects.” 

Tsingshan Group produces around 170,000 tonnes per year of nickel in metal in Indonesia from its three NPI output phases, which have 20 rotary kiln electrical furnace (RKEF) lines. The group’s fourth NPI production phase will come on stream in early 2019, taking its total NPI output to 200,000-210,000 tpy of nickel in metal. 

Despite the potential for a short-term oversupply of nickel, pressure on Class 1 refined nickel products will arise following this projected growth in battery demand. As a result, nickel prices are expected to move higher. The LME’s three-month nickel contract closed the official session at $11,800 per tonne on June 5.

“Some of the higher-cost producers might need a slightly higher incentive price. We estimate $17,000 per tonne,” Hohne-Sparborth said.

“In the longer term, from 2025 onward, with all the projects that we are currently aware of the gap in the market [caused by demand outstripping supply] could only be filled with an incentive price in the $20,000-per-tonne range. We think, long term, the price of nickel will be in the mid-$20,000-[per-tonne] range,” he added.

The experts on the panel did not believe that competing battery technologies that do not use nickel, such as hydrogen fuels cells, were a threat.

“Even if technology changes,” Hoffman said, “there will be a shortage of nickel for batteries by 2025 whatever happens.”

Amy Hinton

Source: https://www.amm.com/Article/3877446/Nonferrous/Invest-in-EV-sector-now-or-regret-later-nickel-mart-told.html

CLIENT FEATURE: Tartisan #Nickel $TN.ca Kenbridge Property Hosts M&I Resource of 7.14 Million Tonnes at 0.62% Nickel, 0.33% Copper $ROX.ca $FF.ca $EDG.ca $AGL.ca $ANZ.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 10:39 AM on Tuesday, June 4th, 2019

Investment Highlights

  • Kenbridge property has a measured and indicated resource of 7.14 million tonnes at 0.62% nickel, 0.33% copper
  • 17.5 (21.8 fully diluted) percent equity stake in Eloro Resources and 2 percent NSR in their La Victoria property
  • Signed Binding Letter of Intent to Purchase Sill Lake Lead-Silver Property, Ontario Read More

Kenbridge Ni Project (ON, Canada)

  • Advanced  stage  deposit  remains open  in  three  directions,  is  equipped with a 623m  deep  shaft  and  has  never  been  mined. 
  • Preliminary  Economic Assessment completed and updated returned robust project 
    economics and operating costs including  a  NPV  of  C$253M  and  cash costs of US$3.47/lb of nickel net of  
    copper credits.
  • Plans for Kenbridge include updating PEA, advancing the project through to feasibility and exploring the open mineralization at depth

FULL DISCLOSURE: Tartisan Nickel Corp. is an advertising client of AGORA Internet Relations Corp.

Tartisan #Nickel $TN.ca – A Perfect Storm Is Brewing For Nickel $ROX.ca $FF.ca $EDG.ca $AGL.ca $ANZ.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 2:54 PM on Monday, June 3rd, 2019

SPONSOR: Tartisan Nickel (TN:CSE)  Kenbridge Property has a measured and indicated resource of 7.14 million tonnes at 0.62% nickel, 0.33% copper. Tartisan also has interests in Peru, including a 20 percent equity stake in Eloro Resources and 2 percent NSR in their La Victoria property. Click her for more information

Tc logo in black
TN: CSE
Fact Sheet
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A Perfect Storm Is Brewing For Nickel

  • Years of underinvestment, long lead times for mine development and a coming surge of electric vehicle demand are all bullish factors for nickel, said Michael Beck, managing director at Regent Advisors.

Beck spoke to Kitco News at Palisade Global’s Hard Asset Conference in Georgia on Jekyll Island held mid-May.

Nickel is a key component of lithium-ion batteries, and Beck said Tesla’s next generation of lithium-ion batteries uses more of the element.

“The ramp-up of demand is just beginning,” said Beck.

“Electric vehicles are going to impose a new demand source on nickel that never really existed before. It takes seven to 10 years to bring on new nickel projects. So you have the makings I thinkâ??at least this is our thesisâ??of a perfect storm.”

Interview is edited for clarity.

Kitco: What impact is the electrical vehicle revolution going to have on nickel?

Michael Beck: Nickel is probably the single most important metal component in battery fabrication. It’s where all of the energy is stored and increasing the battery chemistries are being refined to allow the inclusion of as much nickel as possible. The more nickel, the higher the energy density of the battery. And nickel is particularly interesting from a supply-demand outlook because of the collapse of nickel prices in 2007. The commodity has remained relatively depressed. The current nickel price is US$12,000 a tonne versus the high in 2007, which was $15,000 a tonne. And in this intervening almost 12 years there was no material investment in new nickel capacity. The last 12 years has been a draw down of excess inventory, and that’s coming to an end. The ramp-up of demand is just beginning.

Electric vehicles are going to impose a new demand source on nickel that never really existed before, particularly for class one nickel. It takes seven to 10 years to bring on new nickel projects. So you have the makings I think, at least this is our thesis, of a perfect storm. You have a baked in structural deficit for the next 12 years. You have seven to ten years lead time to bring in new capacity, and all of a sudden you have inventories in the next 18 months going down to almost zero. You also have this new demand source that never existed for nickel. So that gets us rather interested as prospective investors. And in the universe of metals it’s our favorite. We think in the next two to three years you’re going to see a major up-tick of nickel price, and that’s as shortages emerge and that’s what’s going to be required to get new investment in the sector.

Kitco: Why is nickel important for electric vehicles?

Michael Beck: Well it’s interesting. Elon Musk said a couple of years ago that really lithium-ion batteries was a misnomer. It should be really called nickel-iron, and that’s because that’s the energy density of a battery. The energy is stored by the nickel units. And if you look at an average Model 3, it consumes something on the order of 30 kilograms of nickel. And increasingly the cathode makers, which are really the principal components for battery fabrication, are tinkering with chemistries that use more nickel. The higher the energy density, the longer range you have on the vehicle. It is the most important element in in a battery. Without nickel you don’t have the energy storage.

Kitco: If you have a nickel thesis, how does this play out in the junior space?

Michael Beck: It’s a little bit of a challenge because the world’s largest nickel producer, at least in the Western world, is Vale. But Vale is really an iron ore producer. Nickel represents probably less than 15 percent of the company’s portfolio. So if you buy Vale, you’re not really getting nickel. You’re getting an iron ore share. Vale has its own challenges. It has a rather impaired balance sheet, which is why it trades where it does. Another interesting nickel producer that we own is Independence Group NL out of Australia. They have a market cap of about a $1.5B, and the company is growing its nickel production. But you’re right, there aren’t a lot of opportunities to invest in existing nickel producers, because they’re few and far between.

Maybe the most interesting in the larger cap of established players is Norilsk. They’re the number two nickel producer, and they’re based in Russia. That’s probably the single best large-cap way to get exposure to nickel. It has a good dividend yield. It’s a major producer of the metal, and when nickel goes up, their share price goes up accordingly. At the smaller cap end of the spectrum, there are a bunch of smallish nickel explorers and emerging developers.

One that we like particularly is a company called Giga Metals. It’s listed on the TSX. Even though it has a market capitalization of less than $10 million, it happens to own the world’s second-largest undeveloped nickel sulfide deposit. Nickel sulfide is the preferred form of nickel for the production of class one nickel, which is what is required for a battery fabrication. We think the company is completely mis-priced asset, and we look at it as an un-dated call option on nickel. So if our thesis on nickel is correct and nickel goes from $12,000 a tonne to $20,000 a tonne and then perhaps beyond to $50,000 a tonne where it peaked in 2007, then this stock will be disproportionately re-rated and you have a chance, if your thesis is right, to make 10 to 20 times your money. If you’re wrong, maybe the market cap goes from where it is today, from $8 million to $4 million. So we like to see those kinds of bets. There is another company that’s sort of similar, and it’s an asset is not nearly as large but it’s called Grid Metals, and it has a relatively advanced smaller nickel sulfide deposit in Manitoba and it has a market cap of $3 to $4 million dollars.

But again any of these companies, whether they’re at the microcap end of the spectrum or whether they’re big established producers like Norilsk or somebody in between, will benefit when the nickel price rises. We’ve got a fair degree of conviction about our thesis: the adoption rates for EV will accelerate. Nickel shortages will emerge, and all these companies with nickel exposure will benefit.

Source: https://www.kitco.com/news/2019-06-02/A-Perfect-Storm-Is-Brewing-For-Nickel-Michael-Beck.html

Tartisan #Nickel $TN.ca – The biggest themes in global natural resources today #Nickel #Cobalt #Lithium $ROX.ca $FF.ca $EDG.ca $AGL.ca $ANZ.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 9:00 AM on Thursday, May 30th, 2019

SPONSOR: Tartisan Nickel (TN:CSE)  Kenbridge Property has a measured and indicated resource of 7.14 million tonnes at 0.62% nickel, 0.33% copper. Tartisan also has interests in Peru, including a 20 percent equity stake in Eloro Resources and 2 percent NSR in their La Victoria property. Click her for more information

Tc logo in black
TN: CSE
Fact Sheet
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The biggest themes in global natural resources today

  • Ongoing trend towards the electrification of vehicles will likely benefit lithium and other metals such as copper, nickel and cobalt
  • This is a significant change and is being driven by better technology, legislative restrictions on pollution in cities and consumer demand for more environmentally-acceptable transport

Alex Cowie

The global natural resources sector, including mining and energy, as well as agriculture, is about four times bigger than the entire Australian equity market. Sifting through this massive and diverse universe for opportunities is Daniel Sullivan, Co-Head of Global Natural Resources at Janus Henderson Investors.

In our recent Q&A, Daniel explains why he thinks this sector will undergo more change in the next 20 years than the last century and talks through the big themes investors should have on their radar, including the seismic shifts taking place in energy. 

Daniel also looks at where the rejuvenated mining sector could go next and shares some of his thoughts on lithium, coal, gold, LNG, as well as renewable energy and agricultural commodities. 

Read on for this fascinating discussion that goes well beyond the local resource themes to reveal a truly global perspective on this vast and rapidly evolving global industry.  

Q: Please explain what you do in your role as though someone at a dinner party asked you. What are some of the most enjoyable aspects of your work?

When people ask me what I do for a living, I tell them that I invest in companies around the world in the mining, energy and agriculture sectors on behalf of investors. To bring natural resources into a more relatable context, I ask them to look around – at the clothes they are wearing, the phone in their pockets, the food on their dinner plate and even the building over their head and to understand that every component of every item was derived from natural resources. 

Natural resources underpin our society – and for me, that makes the sector a fascinating place to invest. Ours is a sector with an enormous variety of companies, with constant changes in market dynamics across the three sub-sectors giving us a lot to work with and to think about.

Q: What is the big opportunity in your investible universe that the market has not fully appreciated?

We believe the long-term demand for metals, energy and agricultural output will remain strong as the world continues to grow and urbanise; billions of people’s needs must be catered for.

The next twenty years will see more change than was witnessed over the past century, with access to vast numbers of young people and technology available to help solve incredibly complex problems. The companies in our investment space that align to these changes are likely to grow at much higher rates than their peers and become more highly valued over time. This has begun in earnest in the past few years and appears to be accelerating. Rapid change is being discussed in the largest resource companies in the world and this will likely continue to gain momentum.

Q: Agriculture has seen some major developments in genomics, why is this an interesting theme to watch?

The sequencing of the wheat genome will prove to be a major breakthrough for food production in more challenging agricultural areas, boosting incomes and development for many people.

The interaction of genetics, climate, fertiliser and crop protection to deliver better quality produce and improved farmer/supplier economics is always being played out. Corteva Agriscience, the agricultural company being spun out from the merger of Dow and DuPont is an interesting example of a specialist company in this area.

Q: Changing dietary habits of the surging Asian middle class is often cited as a driver for increased protein production. Is this an area you see good opportunities, and if so, how can investors play this?

While China has the world’s largest rates of pork production and consumption, they are largely self-sufficient, meaning there is limited opportunity. That said, we have invested in the leading producers of high quality agricultural products, including milk powder, berries, apples and salmon, which have seen strong growth resulting from the Asian middle class thematic.

Looking at the upstream opportunities from this theme, our investments in seed and fertiliser companies benefitted from the boom in soybean production in Brazil and the US. Over the past 10 years, China has been a major soybean importer.

Q: On a sector basis, mining saw the strongest dividend growth of all last calendar year, with the local big miners BHP and RIO certainly reminding us that miners can actually generate a yield too. Has this return to form of resource stocks as income stocks been a big factor in your investment strategy, and what are you expecting over the medium term in this regard?

The mining sector is currently in a very favourable position, having come through the five-year downturn with reduced capital and operating costs and much lower debt. As a result, in the upturn of the past three years, cash flows have been very significant. Coupled with the sale of non-core assets, cash returns to shareholders have been high. Many of these businesses are in great shape operationally and financially. We expect that they will remain disciplined with capital allocation and continue to drive high returns back to shareholders. This is likely to result in a re-rating from investors.

Q: I understand you have some exposure to the lithium majors. How big an opportunity do you think the battery minerals thematic will be in reality over the next 3-5 years, and where in the supply chain will the best opportunities be?

The ongoing trend towards the electrification of vehicles will likely benefit lithium and other metals such as copper, nickel and cobalt. This is a significant change and is being driven by better technology, legislative restrictions on pollution in cities and consumer demand for more environmentally-acceptable transport. However, we do expect progress to be a little stop-start and significant demand changes may not occur until post-2025.

Q: How does the M&A current in play among the global gold majors mean for the rest of the sector, and what does it tell us about the current state of the industry?

The major gold producers have generally been poor performers and have failed to deliver the significant cash returns seen in the major diversified companies. The recent spate of mergers has been disappointing as they have generally been conducted at low or no premium. Despite being on the right side of the Barrick-Randgold, Newmont-Goldcorp and Barrick-Newmont merger proposals, these have not generated significant performance for our strategy. Where we have historically seen better opportunities has been in explorer-developers, with significant value generation through resource discovery and the successful progression through to development.

Q: Given the recent reversal in Fed policy, it is easy to take a positive view on the gold price from here; do you have a view on gold, and does it influence your strategy?

As a team we tend not to have a strong view on commodity prices – and this includes gold – but we do acknowledge there is a monetary and safety aspect to gold that could see significant price appreciation in crises or monetary realignment. Having said that, there has been no significant value generated from these themes and we are much more interested in real companies operating on the ground to find and develop quality gold mines.

Q: Given the chronic underinvestment in exploration and development assets by the majors since the GFC, how big an opportunity is there in investing in quality juniors, and in which sector are you seeing the best opportunities in this regard?

Part of the problem with a significant downturn is the withdrawal of capital from many junior companies. Many of the promising projects of the past five years were shut down and are only now re-emerging with some small capital raisings recommencing this year. Exploration and development are long term cycles, often seven years or more, so the world has lost a cycle of projects in this downturn. We do need to be mindful of liquidity and this means being cautious in taking on juniors.

Q: What was your take on the recent banning of Australian coal imports at some Chinese ports, and how big a potential risk do you think it is for the majors; i.e.: should we expect more of this?

China is very complex and the interplay between policy, demand, pricing and preferences can be hard to understand. Of their total demand for coal, imported coal is a small component. They have also pivoted very strongly to liquefied natural gas (LNG) imports over the last two years. Across 2018, the markets worked through the tariff disputes, continued economic maturation and more recently, the Lunar New year periods, each of which reduces activity and demand growth.

Q: What is the most interesting theme in energy (including sustainable energy) right now? Please explain why it matters.

For the world’s largest energy companies, gas has become the transitional fuel. This has been seen with major LNG projects built and planned by all the large companies. There has also been a pivot to electricity and trading, and we saw a general sell down away from oil sands. 

The true pivot to renewables will be difficult for companies of this size, but they are increasing investment into wind and solar projects. More interesting are the smaller companies that are still discovering and developing high quality, low cost and growth projects. We have a favourable view of the long term growth of renewable energy and the storage of electricity, but these opportunities are not as common in listed markets.

Q: While Australia only makes up a small part of your investable universe, what do you see as the globally significant themes within the Australian resources sector?

It’s true that our global natural resources investable universe is many times the size of the Australian resources sector, in fact, the market cap of the global resources sector is about four times the market cap of the entire Australian equity market. That said, Australia has a very strong mining heritage and has also grown its energy industry in recent years to become the world’s second largest LNG exporter after Qatar. With a good entrepreneurial culture in Perth, Australia continues to contribute to mineral exploration and development of global significance. With the recent lithium demand growth and price boom, Western Australia has delivered six new mining developments.

Q: What was the last thing you read that really blew you away, and why?

To get a sense of the potential changes that might be just around the corner you should watch Tony Seba, presenting on “Clean Disruption of Energy and Transportation”. 

A similar thought-provoking article is “This is how big oil will die” 

Source: https://www.livewiremarkets.com/wires/the-biggest-themes-in-global-natural-resources-today