Texas Rare Earth Resources and Insiders Buy Over 1.5 Million Shares
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- Category: Rare Earth News
- Published on Saturday, 05 January 2013 17:49
SIERRA BLANCA, TX-- Jan 2, 2013 - Texas Rare Earth Resources Corp. ("Texas Rare Earth"), a heavy rare earths exploration company, today announced that the Company and insiders have collectively purchased over 1.5 million shares of common stock or over 4% of the shares of common stock outstanding based on 36.6 million shares of common stock outstanding as of December 27, 2012.
Overview of Common Share Purchases:
Texas Rare Earth repurchased 576,923 shares of common stock from a private investor at a price of $0.23 per share for an aggregate purchase price of $132,692 on December 27, 2012; the Company plans to cancel the acquired shares from treasury thereby reducing the shares of common stock outstanding to approximately 35.9 million;
Three directors purchased 423,077 shares of common stock at $0.23 per share for an aggregate purchase price of $97,308 in a private transaction with a private investor on December 28, 2012;
Between October 5th and December 3rd, 2012, directors purchased 559,025 shares of common stock in the open market and in block transactions at an average price of $0.384 per share for a total purchase price of $214,600; and
The Company had approximately $5.54 million in cash on hand on January 1, 2013 which management believes is sufficient to advance our business plan through 2014.
Dan Gorski, Chief Executive Officer, stated, "The board and entire management team believes that at our current valuation our company is undervalued and made a decision to enhance shareholder value by investing in ourselves and repurchasing our common stock. On multiple occasions over the past 3 months insiders have taken the opportunity to buy stock as it presented itself. As we begin 2013, we are optimistic about the strategy we have set forth based on our business plan and believe we have sufficient capital to execute on this plan through 2014."
The repurchase of shares of common stock on December 27, 2012, was made pursuant to a privately negotiated stock repurchase agreement. The purchase of shares of common stock by directors on December 28, 2012, was made pursuant to a privately negotiated transaction with the same private investor. The per share repurchase price and the purchase price for the shares was determined through arms-length negotiations with the private investor.
The stock repurchase agreement and the related transactions were approved by our board of directors. The repurchase price was paid through cash on hand from our available surplus. Other than the private repurchase as described above, our board of directors has not authorized any stock repurchase program or plan, and we have no current plans to effect any open-market purchases of our common stock or other repurchases of our common stock.
Rare Earth Manufacturer & Supplier: Chinatungsten Online - http://www.chinatungsten.com
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Cavan Ventures Completes First Phase Ground Program at Pythonga
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- Category: Rare Earth News
- Published on Saturday, 05 January 2013 17:36
Cavan Ventures Inc. announced that it has completed a first phase ground program at its Pythonga rare earth property in Quebec.
The program, completed in Q4 2012, consisted of channel sampling, limited line cutting, limited radiometric survey, surface delimiting for future stripping and prospecting under the guidance of C.D.G.C. inc. from St-Lazare, Qc.. A total of 42 samples has been sent to ALS Minerals lab located in North Vancouver, BC. and the Company is eagerly awaiting results.
Cavan’s President, Peter Swistak, said:
"We are extremely encouraged from what we have seen so far and based on previous results and look forward to an exciting 2013."
Rare Earth Manufacturer & Supplier: Chinatungsten Online - http://www.chinatungsten.com
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China's Sets First Round of 2013 Rare Earth Exports 27% Below 2012
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- Category: Rare Earth News
- Published on Saturday, 05 January 2013 17:29
Rare earth stocks struggled in 2012 as prices for the metals plunged due to weak economic growth and new supplies from non-Chinese producers. The Market Vectors Rare Earth/Strategic Metals ETF (REMX), which tracks the performance of companies engaged in activities related to the producing, refining and recycling of rare earth and strategic metals and minerals, has fallen 11.8 percent in 2012.
Rare earth prices have plummeted 77 percent from their high in 2011. Due to a slowdown in foreign demand China, the world's largest exporter of rare-earths, has decided to lower their 2013 export quotas. It's reported that China's Ministry of Commerce set the first round of 2013 rare earth exports at 15,501 tons, which is 27 percent below 2012.
"If overseas demand picks up next year, the government may increase its second-batch quota," said Wei Chishan, a Shanghai-based analyst with SMM Information & Technology Co.
South Korea Turns to Japan to Reduce Rare Earth Reliance on China
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- Category: Rare Earth News
- Published on Saturday, 05 January 2013 17:18
South Korea has diversified its sources of rare earth minerals in order to diminish reliance upon monopoly supplier China, which currently accounts for over 90% of global production.
Global Times reported last month that South Korea's customs data indicates that rare imports from China had plunged to 54.4% of the total for the period from January to November 2012, as compared to almost eighty percent during the same period in 2011.
Despite South Korea's fraught relationship with former colonial power Japan, the company raised imports from the archipelago nation to 27.9% of the total, as compared to 7.8% in 2011.
China's dominance of global rare earth supplies has become an increasingly sensitive issue for leading industrialized economies, as they serve as key ingredients in a slew of hi-tech, strategically vital industries, including renewable energies, consumer electronics and defense.
Rare Earth Manufacturer & Supplier: Chinatungsten Online - http://www.chinatungsten.com
Tel.: 86 592 5129696; Fax: 86 592 5129797
Email: sales@chinatungsten.com
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3 Rare Earth Stocks to Watch in 2013
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- Category: Rare Earth News
- Published on Friday, 04 January 2013 18:34
Eager to escape the price drops that hit most commodities in 2012, investors are looking to fill their 2013 portfolios with safe bets. While the majority will likely turn to gold or other precious metals, rare earths could be in for a rally in 2013 especially if prices rebound and the market ends up supply-constrained.
Coming off record highs, prices for rare earth elements (REEs) plunged in 2012. Factors behind the price implosion include: weak economic growth in the major rare earth consuming nations, including Japan and the US; slow growth in China, which along with being the world’s largest producer of rare earths, is also the largest consumer; additional supply from non-Chinese producers like US-based Molycorp, which earlier this year re-opened its REE processing facility in California; an increase in Chinese annual REE export quotas; and Chinese domestic overproduction.
Despite the price pullback, potential investors should realize that prices are still well above the levels recorded prior to the price surge of 2011.
While a substantial increase in global REE production has been forecast – considering ramped-up production from Molycorp and Lynas’ rare earth processing facility in Malaysia - there has also been a high level of uncertainty surrounding the sector’s supply future, as China came under increased scrutiny regarding its export policies this past summer. If the global economy is to see any upside over the next 12 months, supply uncertainty, ergo higher prices, could very well work in the favor of producers as countries scramble to lock in REE supplies.
If that happens, a number of well-placed juniors currently trading at substantial discounts to their actual worth are ready to fill any supply gap. Here is a look at three juniors that are poised to take advantage of a short-term market upswing:
South Korea Reduces Dependence on Chinese Rare Earths
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- Category: Rare Earth News
- Published on Friday, 04 January 2013 17:31
South Korea’s dependence on rare earth elements (REEs) from China fell last year as the country diversified its import base.
For the January to November period, REE imports from China accounted for 54.4 percent of total imports, down from 78.4 percent in 2011, according to the Korea Customs Service.
The report adds that the drop in imports was the result of the relatively high price of REEs imported from China — prices averaged $39.21 in 2012, “equal to 101.3 percent of the average price of total imports. The ratio was higher than 91.3 percent in 2011.”
Meanwhile, REE imports from Japan increased to 27.9 percent last year from 7.8 percent in 2011.
China cuts 2013 REE export quotas
Rare Earth Investing News reported last week that China has reduced, by 27 percent, its rare earth export quotas for the first half of 2013.
The country’s Ministry of Commerce announced that 15,499 tonnes of rare earths will be allowed to leave the country; that includes 13,561 tonnes of light rare earths and 1,938 tonnes of heavies. The first-lot quota for 2012 was 21,226 tonnes.
Traditionally, China issues REE quotas in two batches. The second batch for 2012 totalled 9,770 tonnes, bringing the full-year quota to 30,996 tonnes, the highest in three years.
Molycorp's Stock Makes Rare-earth Company Ripe for Takeover
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- Category: Rare Earth News
- Published on Friday, 04 January 2013 17:15
NEW YORK — Molycorp's plunge below the value of its net assets is turning the owner of a rare-earth supply that's unmatched in the Western hemisphere into a takeover target.
The Greenwood Village-based owner of the biggest U.S. deposit of metals that go into everything from smartphones to solar panels and hybrid cars handed investors losses of 61 percent in 2012 amid a slump in rare-earth prices, cost overruns at its California mine, a regulatory probe and the departure of its chief executive. Even after the shares rebounded from a record low in November, Molycorp is trading at a 19 percent discount to its book value, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Molycorp's low valuation and the chance to lock in rare-earth resources could spur manufacturers from Nissan to Siemens to make a bid, according to Byron Capital Markets Ltd. After expanding its refining and processing operations with last year's purchase of Neo Material Technologies, the $1.3 billion company may even appeal to private-equity firms, Robert W. Baird & Co. said. Goldman Sachs projects that Molycorp could fetch $15 a share in a takeover, a 59 percent premium to its Dec. 31 close.
Molycorp shares Wednesday jumped 10 percent, or 95 cents, to close at $10.39.
Miners Ready to Take Punt on Rare Earths
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- Category: Rare Earth News
- Published on Friday, 04 January 2013 16:56
Rare earth elements, as every commodities nerd knows, are in fact not very rare at all. Some, such as cerium and lanthanum, are among the more abundant elements in the earth's crust.
But it is unusual to find the 17 elements that are classified as rare earths in sufficient quantities for economic extraction.
In 2011, however, concerns over the scarcity of these elements -- which are now used in everything from mobile phones and lightbulbs to weapons systems -- sent prices skyrocketing.
"There was a bubble in 2011, after demand for rare earths had rebounded from the financial crisis and the Chinese cut export quotas, reducing supply," explains Carolyn Dennis, analyst at Dundee Securities. "Fears of a shortage caused stockpiling, driving prices to unsustainable levels."
Since then they have plunged, with prices for some rare earths falling as much as 90 per cent in international markets. This year alone, prices for the most important elements have fallen between 50 and 70 per cent, according to Industrial Minerals, a specialist publication that monitors rare earths trading.
Nevertheless, a number of mining companies are still hoping to capitalise on the strategic importance of these rare raw materials.
China currently accounts for more than 90 per cent of global supply -- partly because their production can be a messy and environmentally problematic business -- but some miners are trying to develop rare earths projects to meet demand for production outside China, particularly from countries such as Japan and Korea.
It has not been an easy 12 months for the sector's leading companies, though.
Molycorp and Lynas -- the most advanced in terms of developing commercially producing mines -- have had a torrid year.
Molycorp's share price has fallen nearly 60 per cent this year and, earlier this month, its chief executive resigned, following a range of operational and financial difficulties.
Soft Demand in Europium Oxide Market Prompts Prices Slip
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- Category: Rare Earth News
- Published on Wednesday, 12 December 2012 02:39
Europium oxide 99.99% market remains stagnant with the majority of end users practicing increasingly conservative purchasing strategies. Prevailing offers of the material decrease slightly to RMB6,000-6,300/kg (USD961-1,009/kg), down by around 4% compared with RMB6,300-6,500/kg (USD1,009-1,041/kg) late last week.
A source from a separation plant in South China reported to Asian Metal that europium oxide 99.99% demand shows no signs of rebounding with mainstream offers slipping slightly to MB6,000-6,300/kg (USD961-1,009/kg) at present. “The combination of a weak downstream industry with the belief prices may still have room to fall have discouraged end users from moving to procure europium oxide 99.99% in bulk,” said the source. “We are under great pressure to complete deals.”
“I heard that some traders are willing to sell the material at prices lower than RMB6,000/kg (USD961/kg) for the time being,” added the source, revealing that the plant produces around 4 tons of europium oxide 99.99% per month.
A source from another separation plant in South China confirmed that mainstream offers of europium oxide 99.99% go down to RMB6,000-6,300/kg (USD961-1,009/kg), with a slight decrease of around 4% compared with RMB6,300-6,500/kg (USD1,009-1,041/kg) late last week. “Most consumers buy europium oxide 99.99% from hand to mouth,” said the source. “We are pessimistic about the market in the reminder of this year.”
"The last small deal was concluded at RMB6,000/kg (USD961/kg) a few days ago," added the source, revealing that the plant used to produce around 3 tons of europium oxide 99.99% per month.
Soft Demand in High Purity Lanthanum Oxide Market
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- Category: Rare Earth News
- Published on Wednesday, 12 December 2012 02:27
As optical glasses industry keeps flat, high purity lanthanum oxide 99.999% demand remains soft and the prices drop a bit to RMB95,000-100,000/t (USD15,210-16,010/t) at present.
A source from a separation plant in South China disclosed that lanthanum oxide 99.999% market suffers from slow buying activities due to wait-and-see attitudes of buyers. The plant quotes RMB100,000/t (USD16,010/t) for the material at the moment, down by around RMB2,000/kg (USD320/t) compared with that of last week. “Lanthanum oxide 99.999% inquiries are few and buyers are not interested in rebuilding stocks,” said the source.
The plant produces around 30 tons of lanthanum oxide 99.999% per month and hasn’t concluded transactions so far this week. The source said that lanthanum oxide 99.999% prices will fall slightly in the coming weeks.
A source from a optical glasses producer in South China also noted that they have no plan to rebuild lanthanum oxide 99.999% inventories for the time being due to soft demand from end users. “Optical glasses market is silent, which leads us to be in no hurry to buy rare earth raw material,” said the source. “We can procure lanthanum oxide 99.999% at prices a bit lower than RMB95,000/t (USD15,210/t), however, we prefer to watch the market for a while.”
According to the source, the plant used to produce 20-30 tons of lanthanum oxide 99.999% per month and it has reduced production due to weak demand.