The U.S. trade dispute with China has brought
rare earth minerals back into the headlines and not in a good way. The trade dust up devolved into potshots in
the third week of May 2019, after the Trump Administration moved to effectively
ban China’s premier communications equipment and device supplier Huawai Technologies
Co. Ltd. from the U.S. market. The
consensus among economics and finance pundits is an in-kind response should be
expected from China.
What does China have that the U.S. desperately needs? So many things come to mind, but rare earth
supplies seem a likely lever given its importance in the U.S. electronics
industry. The U.S. Geological Survey
estimates that in 2018, the U.S. imported rare earth compounds and metals
valued at $160 million. About 80% of those
imports come from China that ended up in final products destined for a broad
mix of industries from jet engines to medical equipment to computers. The renewable energy industry is highly
dependent upon the availability of rare earths for solar cells, wind turbines
and grid electronics.
Officials in the People’s Republic of China are well
aware of the power of industry collusion when it comes to rare earths. After all, the PRC provided strong support several years ago for its domestic rare earths suppliers in their efforts to push U.S.
rare earths suppliers out of business with below-cost selling prices. It was a successful strategy that could now inspire
China’s retaliation for barring Huawei.
It might
be entertaining to read the trade dispute headlines with those braggadocious threats
from U.S. and China partisans. However,
investors would be well advised to pay attention to the boring details of the commodity
markets in general and the rare earth segment in particular.
It requires only a cursory look at the list of
public rare earth metals exploration and mining companies to realize that
outside China the rare earth industry is largely a Canadian and Australian
effort.
The largest operator on the list, at least in
term of revenue, is Largo Resources (LGO: TO) with US$353.3 million in total sales in the last twelve months. That said, the revenue is from Largo’s sale
of vanadium and not from rare earths.
Vanadium sales often go hand-in-hand with rare earth sales, especially
erbium that is used along with vanadium to strength steel. The vanadium player is a good reminder of the
interdependence of metals commodities and thus the far reaching implications of
a trade disruption in rare earth metals.
The U.S. has a nascent rare earths sector that
produced 15,000 metric tons of rare earth oxides in 2018. In 2016, an investment group bought certain
assets of bankrupt Molycorp including a mine in Mountain Pass, California. Starting up as MP Productions, mining of bastnaesite,
a rare earth fluorocarbonate mineral, was resumed in early 2018. Interestingly, one of the minority investors
in MP Productions is a China company. Molycorp
has since emerged from bankruptcy and is doing business as Neo Performance Materials(NEO: TO).
The only two winners on the list are, of course,
the China players, China Rare Earth Holdings (0769: HK) and JL MAG Rare-Earth Co. Ltd.(300748: SZ). China Rare Earth experienced a dramatic
increase in price as the rhetoric between the U.S. and China hearted up and
rare earths were posed as trade weapon.
JL MAG Rare-Earth saw an even sharper increase and was successful in
sustaining the new price level.
So far the only smiles in this rare earth metals
story are China shareholders.
SELECTED
RARE EARTH MINERAL COMPANIES
|
||||||
Company
|
SYM**
|
Price*
|
Mkt Cap*
|
Sales*
|
EPS*
|
PE
|
Alkane
Resources Ltd.
|
ALK.AX
|
$0.27
|
$93.0M
|
$85.7M
|
$0.03
|
5.89
|
Arafura Resources,
Inc.
|
ARU.AX
|
$0.04
|
$34.1M
|
$0.1M
|
($0.01)
|
neg
|
Avalon Advanced
Minerals
|
AVL.TO
|
$0.05
|
$12.9M
|
nm
|
($0.01)
|
neg
|
Canada Rare
Earth Corp.
|
LL.V
|
$0.05
|
$8.6M
|
$0.6M
|
($0.01)
|
neg
|
Commerce
Resources Corp.
|
CCE.V
|
$0.05
|
$15.0M
|
nm
|
($0.00)
|
neg
|
China Rare
Earth Holdings Ltd.
|
0769.HK
|
$0.06
|
$150M
|
$114.9M
|
($0.00)
|
neg
|
Cobalt 27
Capital Corp.
|
CBLLF
|
$3.00
|
$255.7M
|
nm
|
($0.79)
|
neg
|
Critical Elements,
Inc.
|
CRE.V
|
$0.33
|
$53.1M
|
nm
|
($0.02)
|
neg
|
Geomega
Resources
|
GOMRF
|
$0.12
|
$10.4M
|
nm
|
$0.00
|
neg
|
Greenland
Minerals
|
GGG.AX
|
$0.07
|
$75.3M
|
$0.1M
|
($0.00)
|
neg
|
Hudson
Resources Ltd.
|
HUD.V
|
$0.24
|
$43.2M
|
nm
|
($0.01)
|
neg
|
Iluka Resources
Ltd.
|
ILU.AX
|
$6.35
|
$2.7B
|
$1.0B
|
$0.50
|
12.77
|
JL MAG
Rare-Earth Co. Ltd.
|
300748.SZ
|
$5.37
|
$2.2B
|
$185.8M
|
$0.06
|
95.03
|
Largo Resources
Ltd.
|
LGO.TO
|
$1.21
|
$645.0M
|
$353.3M
|
$0.32
|
3.76
|
Lithium Americas,
Inc.
|
LAC
|
$3.92
|
$351.0M
|
$5.0M
|
($0.32)
|
Neg
|
Lynas
Corporation
|
LYC.AX
|
$1.63
|
$1.1B
|
$251.5M
|
$0.02
|
81.38
|
Kidman
Resources
|
KDR.AX
|
$1.30
|
$527.2M
|
$0.1M
|
($0.02)
|
Neg
|
Medallion
Resources
|
MDL.V
|
$0.09
|
$3.3M
|
nm
|
($0.02)
|
Neg
|
Midland
Exploration
|
MD.V
|
$0.72
|
$49.7M
|
$0.1M
|
($0.02)
|
Neg
|
Mikango
Resources
|
MKA.V
|
$0.10
|
$11.9M
|
nm
|
($0.04)
|
Neg
|
Neo Performance
Materials, Inc.
|
NEO.TO
|
$8.89
|
$341.4M
|
$329.2M
|
$0.83
|
10.77
|
NioCorp
Developments Ltd.
|
NIOBF
|
$0.40
|
$89.4M
|
nm
|
($0.03)
|
Neg
|
Northern
Minerals, Inc.
|
NTU.AX
|
$0.05
|
$92.5M
|
$3.7M
|
($0.01)
|
Neg
|
Orbite
Technologies
|
EORBF
|
$0.10
|
$51.5M
|
nm
|
($0.02)
|
Neg
|
Peak Resources
|
PEK.AX
|
$0.03
|
$20.5M
|
nm
|
($0.00)
|
Neg
|
Quebec Precious
Metals Corp.
|
CJC.V
|
$0.17
|
$7.5M
|
nm
|
($0.03)
|
Neg
|
Quest Rare
Minerals Ltd.
|
QRMLF
|
$0.00
|
$1.0M
|
nm
|
($0.02)
|
Neg
|
Rainbow Rare Earth
Metals Ltd.
|
RBW.L
|
$4.13
|
$8.4M
|
$2.8M
|
($3.69)
|
Neg
|
Stans Energy
|
HRE.V
|
$0.03
|
$5.5M
|
nm
|
($0.02)
|
Neg
|
Ucore Rate
Metals
|
UCU.V
|
$0.12
|
$33.7M
|
nm
|
($0.02)
|
Neg
|
Wealth Minerals
Ltd.
|
WML.V
|
$0.29
|
$39.2M
|
nm
|
($0.19)
|
Neg
|
Average Trailing Price Earnings Ratio (excludes
outliers)
|
8.29
|
|||||
*All figures in
USD; Market cap and sales in billions or millions as indicated
**US listed
unless otherwise indicated.
|
||||||
Neither the author of the Small Cap Strategist
web log, Crystal Equity Research nor its affiliates have a beneficial interest
in the companies mentioned herein.
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