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As a general rule, the most successful man in life is the man who has the
best information
It wasn't so long ago that the base metals were some of the most rewarding
markets to be involved in during this commodities bull market. That of course
changed drastically when all the base metals were subjected to very large price
drops late in 2008.
It seems like copper, gold and oil have been hogging the commodity spotlight
since then. Those sectors are so well covered that market interest has neglected
other areas in the commodities markets and in my opinion this neglect has created
some potentially lucrative opportunities for astute investors.
The nickel industry has responded to rising nickel inventories, and last year's
stock market crash by closing or postponing many mines - you can see a list
here: http://www.estainlesssteel.com/nickelmineclosures.shtml
But at almost $8 per pound most nickel producers are making money. In fact,
nickel began its run to $25 per pound from under $3, where it had been priced
for several years. So $8 is providing a great return for most of the industry.
Demand will pick back up but the new mines - and the development and exploration
stage, the brown & greenfield stage projects won't exist, or the number
of projects will be down severely. Your pipeline of different stage projects
from the ground to the mill to market will have been damaged for quite some
time by the cutbacks due to rising inventories and lowered prices.
This means that any junior exploration companies that do make a big nickel
discovery should get rewarded. But it has been so long since speculative investors
made big money on nickel - the last big one was when Vale bought Canico Resources'
Onca Puma deposit in Brazil in 2005 for $20/share - they have forgotten where
to look.
Below, I have listed what are arguably two of the top nickel exploration plays
in the world right now, and one junior that is active near each. The very low
price of these two junior stocks tells me they have likely not been able to
finance since the market crash last year, but they are in two of the world's
best areas for nickel.
Raglan Mine Area, northern Quebec, Canada
Knight Resources (KNP-TSXv - $0.08)
The high grade (>2% nickel) Raglan Mine in northern Quebec, Canada is the
crown jewel of Xstrata's nickel properties. Production began at the Raglan
Mine in 1997. The current mine life is estimated at more than 30 years.
It's mostly underground mining and a fly-in, fly-out operation. Geologically
the deposits all rest in the Raglan formation, which is the contact point between
two geological regions. Xstrata owns a 70 km stretch of the Raglan formation.
One hundred kilometers west, and along strike, another mining major, Anglo
American, with its partner Knight Resources (KNP-TSXv; $0.08), jointly owns
another 70 km of this same Raglan formation. And they have had great success
in outlining several pods of mineralization over the last couple of years.
Junior explorer Knight Resources and Anglo American are joint venture partners.
Knight's management comes from Falconbridge, and CEO Harvey Keats was also
a key member of the team at Diamond Fields that drilled out the large Voisey
Bay nickel deposit in nearby Labrador. VP Exploration, Robin Adair, also worked
for Falconbridge as manager of North American nickel exploration and was responsible
for exploration at Raglan.
The Anglo-Knight team actually drilled some of their highest grade holes ever
in the last program - 28 meters of 3.21% nickel and 1.1% copper, plus platinum
and palladium credits. But the news came out in November 2008 as the markets
were collapsing, and got ignored.
Shares Issued: 90.6 Million
Price - $0.07
Cash: $1.57 million
Kabanga Nickel Belt, Tanzania
Castillian Resources (CT-TSXv: $0.05)
The following comes from Xstrata's website and it's true:
The Kabanga nickel project is among the world's most attractive undeveloped
nickel sulphide deposits, with a total estimated Indicated Mineral Resource
of 23.23 million tonnes grading 2.64% nickel and a total estimated Inferred
Resource of 28.5 million tonnes grading 2.7% nickel. It's a 50-50 joint venture
between Xstrata and Barrick Gold.
Kabanga is big. It's definitely what you would consider high grade. And one
of juniors working near there is Castillian Resources. Castillian also has
Dave Gower as CEO, who was previously the head of global nickel exploration
at Falconbridge (now Xstrata).
Castillian has the Kagera Nickel Project, a 960 square kilometer land package
along trend and the key claims lie within 10 km of Kabanga. This project has
a lot of blue-sky potential; and Gower has said it is drill ready.
Shares Issued: 89.1 Million
Price - $0.05
Cash: under $1 million
Conclusion
These two junior companies, Knight & Castillian, are exploring in two
of the top nickel camps in the world, therefore increasing the opportunity
for their shareholders to participate in a major discovery.
Nickel exploration has completely fallen off investor's radar screens, as
the low share prices of these junior companies attest. However, nickel prices
remain buoyant; and most producers are still making money. And that means the
market should reward any new discovery.
If you're interested in the junior resource market and would
like to learn more please come and visit us at www.aheadoftheherd.com.
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