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This is the Dump part of the pump&dump - always be cautious when the company and partner pays $400k for a pump firm...
What happened? So crazy
Oh man... that was fast.
looks like this one wants to go to Mars not the moon, it just keeps shooting up.
Very dirty to make, Thats why they are shutting down these plants in China and India, Enviro concerns.
Let's see if I can help you out here...
Graphene and graphite are the same thing.
Graphene is just a single layer of graphite one atom thick.
GRXXF commences drilling at Lac Aux http://bit.ly/2p4iEKq
It is being mined in Africa and India where some of the finest flake is found. Lots of issues going on right now with child labor and taxe increases. Trump and tarrifs will bring this high demand mineral back to North America. We will need huge amounts for eletric cars and many new inventions that this miracle mineral can performe.
Nice article in relation to the industry
.https://mashable.com/2018/03/11/apple-iphone-cobalt-batteries-electric-vehicles/#yNMJQ_9YDiqa
Significant because almost no one mines it, this will be a big deal in a few more months, lots going on.
You’re right, because he uses graphite
New commodity that will blow up
CEO of Tesla said a few weeks ago that he would not use Graphene in his new Ion Lithium Batterys because of the environmental impact of it.
I think most of us like the the progress of this company. The news has been solid and quantifiable. It has been a good week.
Can you provide links for the YouTube videos? Are they official PR?
What is going on with this jewel that it just keeps pushing upward? is it all the articles they are paying for to get exposure? How much higher can this thing go up? they have no revenu. Other graphite companies are not even going up like this. Is there somthing we dont know that insoders know? thoughts....
I took a position in the .70 and I am kicking myself for not buying more. Another hidden jewwel is ECORF. They are in talks with Lockheed Martin. You Tube videos on ECORF are very informative on this company and the future of graphite. They have the best flake Grafphite in India and they have already atarted positioning themselves. Thoughs?
Took another small position yesterday, I really should have just bought more when it was in the 80s :P
GRXXF into the 1.30's weeeeeeeeee
maybe i should take ihub suggestions more seriously? hot danm
Battery Grade Flake (99.9%) $5,000 – $20,000 per ton.
What is the price of graphite?
Pricing
Type of Natural Graphite Average Price ($/tonne January 2013
Medium Flake (95% – 98%) $1,050 – $1,400
Large Flake (95% – 98%) $1,400 – $1,800
Jumbo Flake (95% – 98%) > $1,600
Battery Grade Flake (99.9%) $5,000 – $20,000
How much does it cost for graphene?
As of end-2015, the market price of graphene was about $100 per gram. Once the method of production is optimised and scaled up, the cost of graphene is expected to come down to the cost of the raw materials, which will likely be centered on the existing suppliers for graphite: China and India.
Predictions 2016: Graphene: research now, reap next decade - Deloitte
https://www2.deloitte.com/.../tmt-pred16-tech-graphene-research-now-reap-next-decade....
Graphite: The Newest "Next Big Thing"
Monday July 09, 2012 15:08
Most micro-cap resource stocks have been underwater since a four year high ended in early March 2011 with the Toronto Venture Exchange Index down over 50% since that time. Stock performance has been abysmal despite record or near-record prices for most commodities in 2011 and continuing high prices in 2012.
Many factors have contributed to the decline in junior exploration and mining stocks and I see little evidence for a quick recovery. However, stock markets, and certainly yours truly, will always find something to be long on. That current something for me in the junior resource sector is graphite.
Along with diamond, graphite is an allotrope of the semi-metal element carbon. However, it has almost the exact opposite physical and chemical properties. Graphite is gray to black, opaque with a metallic luster, a soft mineral with Mohs hardness of 1 to 2, and arranged in parallel hexagonal sheets. It is chemically inert and flexible, yet very strong. Graphite is of low specific gravity, highly refractory with a 3927 C melting point, and electrically and thermally conductive. Its unique characteristics have led to many industrial applications. Graphite deposits occur in high-grade metamorphic rocks that are widespread and abundant across the Earth. They tend to be small deposits that make low-cost mines.
Graphite is much more than the lead in your pencil and the carbon fiber additive that lets you “grip it and rip it” with a big-headed composite driver. These uses actually constitute a small part of demand. Three-quarters of the world’s graphite is used in traditional applications such as steel-making, foundry moldings, refractories, auto parts, and lubricants. Minor uses include batteries, pencils, electronics, and numerous other products. Significant future demand growth is projected to include fuel cells, lithium-ion and vanadium redox batteries, and pebble-bed nuclear reactors. Development and commercial application of the much-ballyhooed graphene (single atom layer graphite) technology is a decade or more away.
The graphite industry is divided into three parts: natural, synthetic, and carbon fiber. Supply cannot meet current demand, and prices have risen substantially since late 2009. The world market is worth about $13 billion per year, of which $8 billion is synthetic graphite, $4 billion is carbon fiber, and $1 billion is natural graphite. It is further broken down into these sources:
Synthetic graphite and carbon fiber are high purity, expensive forms produced from petroleum coke, primarily in the United States with significant exports to other consuming countries. They constitute the majority of graphite demand.
Natural graphite production is mainly from small underground mines in China. By the early 2000s, graphite mines outside of China were rendered uneconomic when it flooded the market and drove prices down. World production totaled about 1.1 million tonnes in 2011 with an estimated 75 % coming from that country. Other countries with significant graphite mine production include Brazil, North Korea, Canada, India, Romania, Ukraine, Mexico, Madagascar, Austria, Turkey, and Sri Lanka.
Three types of natural graphite are produced:
Vein, aka lump graphite, is coarsely crystalline, a small specialized market, and the highest-priced natural graphite. It is produced from Sri Lanka mines by hand-sorting and comprises only 1% of the market.
Flake graphite is categorized by crystal size with large (+80 mesh), medium (-80 to +100 mesh), and fine (-100 to +300 mesh). Marketable products must grade 94-97% graphitic carbon (Cg) and are used for both traditional and new applications. Flake constitutes 49% of the market.
Amorphous powder graphite a misnomer. It is actually crystalline but very fine grained (-300 mesh). At 80-85% Cg, the amorphous variety is used for lower-priced applications and amounts to 50% of the total natural graphite market.
In general, larger crystal sizes and higher Cg content command higher prices per tonne.
Demand has increased over the past 18 years, although not exactly year over year. The natural graphite industry is strongly correlated with world economic health, illustrated by the chart below:
Rapid growth in demand has led to significant price increases over the past three years:
Source: Industrial Minerals Inc
Many specialized markets command premium prices but require further purification and processing. Examples include spherical graphite, necessary for Li-ion batteries, and expanded graphite, used increasingly in heat-sensitive applications.
Natural graphite uses are broken down as follows:
Growing users include the refractory and foundry industries and especially the battery sector.
Reminiscent of the rare earth element run-up in 2009-2010, the graphite boom is driven by these catalysts:
Prices have increased because traditional demand exceeds mine supply. New technology applications have favored flake graphite, widening the price gap over amorphous graphite.
China has few flake deposits and mostly mines low-value amorphous graphite underground.
With domestic demand growing, China is restricting exports thru taxes and licensing and may impose export quotas.
China is rationalizing its fragmented industry into a state-sponsored monopoly or oligopoly to remediate environmental degradation, improve labor standards, and address infrastructure and transportation problems.
The Western World views dependency on Chinese graphite as an unreliable and capricious source.
With rising prices, new export policies, and consolidation in China, graphite companies have been successfully promoted with dramatic increases in market capitalizations.
Like the REE bubble in 2009-2011, graphite is now the “Next Big Thing.”
Also much like the rare earth elements, graphite deposits are plentiful and occur worldwide. The best deposits are restricted to high-grade metamorphic terranes whose protoliths were organic-bearing sedimentary rocks. Most deposits are small, structurally deformed lenses that are irregular in geometry.
One year ago I was aware of two graphite-focused companies on the Toronto Venture Exchange. Based on evaluations of the commodity fundamentals and insight into those particular stocks, I became a shareholder of a private graphite development company that went public in February 2012. At this juncture, these three companies appear to be ahead of the game and are in my opinion “the cream of the crop”.
Now it seems every snake, shark, charlatan, and shyster within a half kilometer of Vancouver’s Coal Harbor has a new graphite deal via a capital pool company, shell, IPO, or change of business. The bubble has blown up quickly with over 35 listed Venture Exchange companies and more than 50 worldwide that hold graphite projects. There are doubtless many more in process.
Like recent junior sector bubbles (e.g., uranium, lithium, rare earth elements, Colombia gold, Yukon gold), the graphite space will fill with many pretenders amongst the very few contenders. Many will mine the stock market until another next big thing comes along. As per previous booms, 95% or more are destined to fail.
Promotion of micro-cap graphite companies has been tied to future growth of high tech and green tech applications. However, demand from traditional applications is currently pressuring supply, and many mines in China are nearly the end of their productive lives. Therefore, there is optimism that this particular boom will demonstrate some staying power.
My favorite few are graphite developers that have an advanced deposit or a former mine in a geopolitically stable and mining-friendly location, nearby infrastructure including highway, power, water, and port, high-grade (> 5%) and/or a high percentage flake component, open pit configuration with a low strip ratio, and favorable process metallurgy.
Graphite beneficiation uses standard mineral industry technology with crushing, grinding, flotation, drying, packing, and shipping. However, producing a marketable concentrate with >94% Cg content often requires multi-stage processing that reduces flake size. As with most commodities, metallurgy can be a fatal flaw and as always, a graphite producer should fall into the lowest cost quartile of its peers to ensure sufficient margins in times of slow demand and low prices.
Most graphite deposits are small so there should be room for development of a number of mines by competent juniors. Rationalization of the business by merger and acquisition will probably occur and may lead to large, integrated mine-to-market graphite companies. There are a dozen large public and private synthetic graphite and carbon fiber companies worldwide, and they likely will be players as the up-and-coming natural graphite mining sector consolidates.
Graphite does not trade openly and marketing and sales are of utmost importance. Capital expenditures should be significantly less than $100 million and at one past-producing mine, capex is projected at under $25 million. Project financings are likely to be achieved thru a combination of off-take agreements with strategic partners (consumers and end-users) and private debt instruments (merchant banks, hedge funds, and/or high net-worth investors), and hopefully not by equity raises that tend to dilute and harm early shareholders.
Because mines tend to be small with low capital requirements, the graphite market is more suited to junior companies with limited financial means than the lithium or REE sectors that generally require huge capital expenditures and a major partner.
A graphite company is no different than any other junior resource company. In addition to evaluating its flagship project, we must always assess a company’s share structure, the people, and its peer market valuation. In that regard, I urge you to read about my proven evaluation methods and trading philosophy at www.MercenaryGeologist.com.
Ciao for now,
By Mickey Fulp
Mercenary Geologist
Acknowledgement: Erin Ostrom is the editor of MercenaryGeologist.com.
The Mercenary Geologist Michael S. “Mickey” Fulp is a Certified Professional Geologist with a B.Sc. Earth Sciences with honor from the University of Tulsa, and M.Sc. Geology from the University of New Mexico. Mickey has 35 years experience as an exploration geologist and analyst searching for economic deposits of base and precious metals, industrial minerals, uranium, coal, oil and gas, and water in North and South America, Europe, and Asia.
Mickey worked for junior explorers, major mining companies, private companies, and investors as a consulting economic geologist for the past 20 years, specializing in geological mapping, property evaluation, and business development. In addition to Mickey’s professional credentials and experience, he is high-altitude proficient, and is bilingual in English and Spanish. From 2003 to 2006, he made four outcrop ore discoveries in Peru, Nevada, Chile, and British Columbia.
Mickey is well-known and highly respected throughout the mining and exploration community due to his ongoing work as an analyst, writer, and speaker.
Contact: Contact@MercenaryGeologist.com
Disclaimer: I am not a certified financial analyst, broker, or professional qualified to offer investment advice. Nothing in a report, commentary, this website, interview, and other content constitutes or can be construed as investment advice or an offer or solicitation to buy or sell stock. Information is obtained from research of public documents and content available on the company’s website, regulatory filings, various stock exchange websites, and stock information services, through discussions with company representatives, agents, other professionals and investors, and field visits. While the information is believed to be accurate and reliable, it is not guaranteed or implied to be so. The information may not be complete or correct; it is provided in good faith but without any legal responsibility or obligation to provide future updates. I accept no responsibility, or assume any liability, whatsoever, for any direct, indirect or consequential loss arising from the use of the information. The information contained in a report, commentary, this website, interview, and other content is subject to change without notice, may become outdated, and will not be updated. A report, commentary, this website, interview, and other content reflect my personal opinions and views and nothing more. All content of this website is subject to international copyright protection and no part or portion of this website, report, commentary, interview, and other content may be altered, reproduced, copied, emailed, faxed, or distributed in any form without the express written consent of Michael S. (Mickey) Fulp, Mercenary Geologist.com LLC.
100 % agree , $Grxxf keeps building new bases. Nice and steady climb . And alot more to look foward too.
That be sweet , new highs again today
Price target around $5. Market cap around $100 Million . Seems as though there are only 2 companies mining in North America. Getting a head start on the competition.
We've had 9 consec high hi and lows, we closed at the 52wk high, we past the last support level of 1.09 yesterday, no resistance looking left and vol is increasing and slight bottoming tail today. A pull back will occur at some point however, looks like momentum continues according to the chart!
More...with this volume and churn building the accumulation, plus an added catalyst for the mine going live it looks very good. Price targets are out the window, this beast has a mind of its own.
What is driving the pps higher outside of the fact there's solid demand for graphite?
For real... Where did the team go? I enjoyed reading the positive daily posts. Good day today again... lovely 30 minute chart
Looks good big blocks getting in.
GRXXF: appoints Teresa Cherry as Chief Financial Officer and member of the Board of Directors effective March 5, 2018. The Company also announced Sheri Rempel has resigned from her positions as Chief Financial Officer and as a director.
1.09s ... one penny away baby!
Great start, Coming to 1.10 see if we can break and make our new base. Love this move, Slow and steady wins the race !!!!! $GRXXF
GRXXF Announces Appointment of Director and Chief Financial Officer http://bit.ly/2D09cvW
Would like to see much more than that but yea..good start!!!!! Whoooo!
Good Morning $GRXXF, Whooo what a great week last week, We were able to bust into that 1.00 land and make it our new base. Expecting news soon. Lets hit 1.10 today !!!!!!
great old article
http://nextsourcematerials.com/graphite/about-graphite/
I said Tuesday $1.05 to a buddy. Don’t make me a liar
$GRXXF boom Hod lets make 1.00 our new base...
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Graphite Energy Corp is a mining company, that is focused on developing graphite resources. Graphite is one of the most in demand technology metals that is required for a green and sustainable world. Graphite Energy Corp. has state-of-the-art mining technology that is friendly to the environment. Our mine, located in Quebec Canada, has historically been a natural resource for graphite. With the demand for graphite growing on some of the most prominent and cutting edge industries such as solar and lithium batteries in electric cars and robotics, we have updated our technology to meet the demands of the future.
Graphite has made a major impact in some of mankind most pressing issues and future initiatives. Graphite is now being used to store power in batteries within Tesla home batteries as well within any and all electrical car batteries, mobile phones, laptops and anything else that requires a battery. Tesla has now began sales of their solar roofs and without graphite there will be no batteries for this power to be stored in.
This precious resource is also now being implemented in one of the largest issues that mankind faces, 'Fresh Water". Graphite is being used in desalination plants to remove salt from ocean water. The world is lacking fresh water and graphite is the answer to solve this pressing issue.
Robots require graphite for their battery packs and for their production, as graphite is lighter and stronger than steel. Larry Page the founder of Google and 'smart money' are investing heavily in robotics and artificial intelligence as robotics will be mankind's future. Graphite will be part of the solution for the mass manufacturing of Robots.
A new generation of nuclear reactors called ‘pebble-bed nuclear reactors’ also use large amounts of flake graphite. This technology means nuclear reactors can be smaller, and easy to use. Graphite and it’s applications are fast-growing!
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