Author

admin

Browsing

The global uranium market is entering what industry leaders describe as a pivotal phase, with strengthening nuclear demand colliding with tightening supply and rising geopolitical competition for fuel.

At the Prospectors & Developers Association of Canada (PDAC) convention in Toronto, an executive from Cameco (TSX:CCO,NYSE:CCJ) and an analyst from UxC warned that the nuclear fuel cycle is undergoing a structural shift; one that could reshape uranium pricing and supply security over the coming decades.

During a presentation titled “Reviving the Nuclear Life Cycle,’ Grant Isaac, president and COO of Cameco, said the market often underestimates uranium demand because much of it is driven by long-term government and utilities agreements that are negotiated outside the public market.

“The sovereign interest in where nuclear fuel is coming from over a very long period of time is probably one of the most unrecognized pieces of uranium demand out there,” he said.

Unlike most commodities, uranium is rarely traded through large spot exchanges. Instead, utilities typically secure fuel years in advance through long-term contracts tied to reactor operations.

“Uranium is a product for which there is no substitute,” Isaac said.

“We don’t produce uranium to dump into a spot market or to sell to a smelter or metals exchange. That’s not how our market works … the market works on long-term planning tied directly to reactor demand.”

Nuclear expansion reshaping uranium demand

The global nuclear fleet currently includes roughly 441 reactors generating about 400 gigawatts of electricity, according to data from UxC. By 2040, that capacity could grow to more than 580 gigawatts as new reactors come online and existing units receive license extensions.

China alone operates about 60 reactors and has another 38 under construction, representing nearly 40 gigawatts of additional capacity. India is also expanding rapidly as part of its energy security strategy.

Elsewhere, nuclear demand is being supported by reactor restarts in Japan and steady generation in France, as well as new projects in the US and across Central and Eastern Europe.

Isaac noted that many reactors originally slated for closure are now being upgraded and extended, adding new fuel requirements that were not anticipated just a few years ago. Utilities are investing in upgrades that can boost output by 50 to 100 megawatts per reactor, he said — changes that require additional uranium.

“That alone is significant demand for uranium that nobody was talking about three or four years ago,” Isaac said.

Uranium supply challenges intensifying

While demand is strengthening, speakers at PDAC warned that uranium supply faces a range of structural constraints, from geopolitical disruptions to project development risks.

Nick Carter, executive vice president at UxC, said Asia will account for much of that demand growth, particularly in China and India. In terms of supply, global uranium production totaled about 173 million pounds in 2025, according to UxC. The largest producer was Kazakhstan, followed by Canada, Namibia and Australia.

Yet even with new projects planned, UxC forecasts significant deficits beginning around 2030.

“We do start seeing supply gaps starting around 2030 and extending through 2040. Filling that gap will be quite challenging,’ Carter said. Several factors are complicating the supply outlook.

Political instability has already disrupted production in parts of Africa. In 2023, the government of Niger took control of uranium assets previously operated by French nuclear group Orano.

“That is material that used to come into the west that is not coming into the west anymore,” Isaac said.

At the same time, China has aggressively secured uranium supply through overseas investments and long-term contracts. Carter estimates that the Asian nation now controls or has access to nearly 40 percent of global primary uranium production through imports and equity stakes in foreign mines.

“China imported nearly 70 million pounds of open market supply last year,” Carter said, adding that large volumes of Russian material are also being redirected to Chinese buyers.

New mines need higher incentive prices

Despite strong demand fundamentals, uranium prices have not yet fully reflected tightening supply conditions across the nuclear fuel cycle. Downstream services such as enrichment and conversion have already experienced significant price increases, Isaac said, suggesting the uranium market itself could follow.

“We need to see price discovery in our industry,” he said, adding that the era of extremely cheap uranium is likely over.

“We’re out of US$20 uranium, and we’re probably out of US$40,” he said. “And I think we’re running out of US$80.”

Higher uranium prices may ultimately be required to incentivize new mines and ensure long-term fuel availability for the expanding nuclear sector.

“If we treat nuclear fuel as the long-lead item that it actually is,” Isaac said, “Then the industry can transition smoothly into this period of growth.” Otherwise, he warned, the market may face a more abrupt reset.

“It will reset,” he said. “But it may reset more violently than any of us would like.”

Uranium prices enter new phase of volatility

Also speaking at PDAC, Treva Klingbiel, president of TradeTech, said the uranium market is entering a new phase marked by stronger prices and increasing volatility. She noted that uranium prices have historically moved in pronounced “supercycles,” a pattern visible in price data dating back to the late 1960s.

The most recent cycle has been particularly dramatic, she said, highlighting how the market has rebounded from the prolonged downturn that followed the Fukushima accident.

In 2016, uranium prices fell to a low of about US$17.75 per pound as early reactor closures, production costs well above market prices and supportive policies for gas and renewable energy weighed heavily on the sector.

Since then, the market has staged a sharp recovery.

“Since that low point, the price has more than quintupled,” Klingbiel said.

Today, TradeTech’s daily spot price sits around US$85, while the long-term contract price has climbed to about US$90. She added that TradeTech’s exchange value, a monthly pricing indicator, briefly reached US$100 in late January, a level that has been recorded only a handful of times since the firm began tracking uranium prices in 1968.

Looking ahead, Klingbiel said the uranium industry is now grappling with how quickly supply and demand can respond to geopolitical and policy shifts. In her view, the velocity is ‘very different from the past.’

Recent political developments, particularly shifting trade policies and evolving alliances, have already disrupted longstanding nuclear fuel supply chains. While some government initiatives are boosting nuclear power, other policies have placed pressure on available supply of uranium and enrichment services.

Limited investment over the past decade has contributed to what TradeTech views as a widening structural deficit.

“The demand is there,” Klingbiel told listeners at PDAC.

“What we need now is the capital to develop new production to bridge that supply gap.”

Securities Disclosure: I, Georgia Williams, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

This post appeared first on investingnews.com

Jeffrey Christian, managing partner at CPM Group, sees gold and silver prices continuing to rise as global political and economic risks persist.

‘We look at the world right now and we see a world where the risks and uncertainties are greater now than at any time since Pearl Harbor. December 1941,’ he said.

Securities Disclosure: I, Charlotte McLeod, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

This post appeared first on investingnews.com

Red Mountain Mining Limited (ASX: RMX, US CODE: RMXFF, or “Company”) a Critical Minerals exploration and development company with an established portfolio in Tier-1 Mining Districts in the United States and Australia, is pleased to announce that it has received continued strong assay results from the second tranche of assays for its auger soil sampling program at the Oaky Creek prospect at the Company’s 100% owned Armidale Antimony-Gold project in New South Wales.

HIGHLIGHTS:

  • Red Mountain has confirmed the presence of multiple drill-ready Antimony targets at the Oaky Creek Prospect following the second batch of analytical results from its comprehensive auger soil sampling program at the Armidale Antimony-Gold Project
  • Newly discovered stibnite vein rock samples return up to an exceptionally high grade of 28.1% Sb. The new samples collected ~600m NNW of the Oaky Creek South workings, highlight the potential for a new extension to the current mineralised system at Oaky Creek
  • Conventional and auger soil sampling and rock analytical results of up to 39.3% Sb and 1.09ppm Au for Oaky Creek indicate the potential of a large-scale orogenic Antimony-gold vein system with a strike extent of ~3km at surface, which is analogous to Larvotto Resources’ Hillgrove project, Australia’s largest known Antimony deposit
  • Previously identified 200m x 30m Antimony-arsenic anomaly near the Oaky Creek South Main Grid has been extended by a further 30% and remains open to the northeast, with values of up to 251ppm Sb and 1,443ppm As returned
  • Soil sampling from southern end of Oaky Creek North has further supported the NNW- trending Antimony anomaly, with values of up to 137ppm Sb and 334ppm As. Aligning with previously identified conventional soil anomaly and mineralised stibnite-bearing rock sampling, providing further evidence for widespread antimony mineralisation at Oaky Creek
  • Results for approximately 900 further auger soil samples collected during January and February are pending and expected to be received before the end of March. These samples will expand auger coverage at both Oaky Creek North and Oaky Creek South, including the newly collected anomalous rock sample, and will be used in conjunction with existing datasets to refine multiple orogenic Antimony vein targets ahead of planned drill-testing
  • Further assays pending for Thompson Falls Antimony Project in the US following recently announced initial high-grade Antimony results

Assay results from the January-February field program across Oaky Creek North and Oaky Creek South have reported numerous highly anomalous samples including a stibnite vein sample collected ~600m NNW of the Oaky Creek South workings returning 28.1% Sb. 42 rock samples now exceed 0.5% Sb at Oaky Creek, further supporting the presence of widespread antimony mineralisation across the Oaky Creek Prospect and potentially indicating an extension to the Oaky Creek South mineralised system (see below).

Results for approximately 900 further auger soil samples collected during January and February remain pending, with assays expected before the end of March. These results will significantly expand coverage at both Oaky Creek North and Oaky Creek South (Figure 1) and will be used in conjunction with datasets for additional expected orogenic antimony vein targets ahead of planned drill testing in Q2 2026.

New Auger Assay Results Extend Antimony-Arsenic Anomaly at Oaky Creek South

As was reported in November 20251, initial auger sampling at the Oaky South Main Grid, located approximately 400m north-northwest of the small historical pits and shafts at Oaky Creek South, defined a coherent NE-striking ~200m x 30m Sb-As anomaly that remained open to the northeast.

Newly received results from sampling completed in late 2025 returned values of up to 251ppm Sb and 1,443ppm As (Appendix 1) and extend this anomaly ~60m further to the northeast (Figure 2). The anomaly remains open in that direction, with analytical results for sampling completed in January and February 2026 pending and represents a priority target for planned drill testing in Q2 2026.

The new results comprise approximately 180 auger soil samples collected over conventional soil anomalies at Oaky Creek South and Oaky Creek North, expanding coverage from the initial ~250 auger samples collected at Oaky Creek South in November 20252 (Figure 1).

Click here for the full ASX Release

This post appeared first on investingnews.com

David Cates, president and CEO of Denison Mines (TSX:DML,NYSEAMERICAN:DNN), discusses uranium market dynamics, as well as the company’s path forward after its recent final investment decision for the Phoenix ISR uranium project in Saskatchewan’s Athabasca Basin.

Construction at the asset has begun, with first production planned for mid-2028.

Securities Disclosure: I, Charlotte McLeod, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

This post appeared first on investingnews.com

Jeffrey Christian, managing partner at CPM Group, sees gold and silver prices continuing to rise as global political and economic risks persist.

‘We look at the world right now and we see a world where the risks and uncertainties are greater now than at any time since Pearl Harbor. December 1941,’ he said.

Securities Disclosure: I, Charlotte McLeod, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

This post appeared first on investingnews.com

Precious metals prices are responding to the impact of the US-Iran war, as well as inflation data.

The war has weighed on the precious metals market for much of this past week. An oil price surge past US$100 per barrel increased the threat of inflation and strengthened the US dollar, softening the investment case for gold.

That trend seemed to reverse after US President Donald Trump made statements that the end of the war is in sight, and G7 nations are considering potential plans to potentially release strategic reserves. However, the relief was short-lived.

Let’s take a look at what’s got the precious metals moving over the past week.

Gold price

Gold prices shot up on March 2 to US$5,400 per ounce as the war broke out in the Middle East.

While many may have expected the price of gold to continue skyrocketing on safe-haven demand during an escalating war, this typically is not the case in a region where military conflict can greatly impact oil prices..

Historically, gold prices get an immediate ‘safe-haven bump’ when conflict breaks out in the oil-rich Middle Eastern region. Yet, time and time again we’ve seen these gains are short-lived as macroeconomic factors like rising oil prices and a stronger US dollar often take over the direction of gold prices.

It’s been a choppy week for gold prices as investors weigh safe-haven concerns with a shifting inflation outlook. On March 5, the yellow metal managed an intraday high of US$5,164.05, before paring those gains down to a low of US$5,058.14 as liquidity stresses and renewed inflation fears outweighed gold’s traditional safe-haven role.

Gold reversed course on March 6, rising to an intraday high of US$5,171.92 as prices stabilized after a sharp mid-week correction. The oil price surge weighed on rate-cut bets, pushing prices down again Monday (March 9) morning to US$5,071.03; however, by the end of the trading session the yellow metal had reversed course to close at US$5,136.97.

By early morning trading Tuesday (March 10), the precious metal had reached an intraday high of US$5,235.61, before retreating to close at US$5,191.81. This was fueled by a ‘most intense’ day of U.S. strikes against Iran, despite conflicting signals from the White House regarding the conflict’s end.

On Wednesday (March 11) morning, the release of US Consumer Price Index (CPI) data showed headline inflation up by 2.4 percent over the last 12-months in February.

More US economic data will come on Friday (March 13) with the release of personal consumption expenditures (PCE) index for February, which analysts are projected will show upwards of 2.7 percent year-over-year growth.

With the threat of stickier inflation, gold investors are anticipating that the US Federal Reserve will sit on current interest rates for longer. In response, gold traded back down to as low as US$5,148.30 early Wednesday morning.

Still, gold prices are proving resilient given the long-term fundamentals for the metal. As of 12:00 p.m. PST Wednesday (March 11) gold was trading at US$5,170.83.

Gold price chart, March 5, 2026, to March 11, 2026.

Gold price chart, March 5, 2026, to March 11, 2026.

Here are the primary drivers for gold this past week:

  • Geopolitical conflict in the Middle East remains the primary driver for safe-haven gold this week. Investors are getting mixed signals as to how long this conflict could last and how much damage it will do to global oil markets.
    • US economic data pointing to higher inflation for longer.
    • A weakened US dollar and a retreat in 10 year Treasury yields provided some support for gold.
    • Investor profit-taking is still at pay this week as are expected technical pullbacks in what many gold analysts believe is a broader uptrend in prices for the yellow metal.

      In other gold news, Venezuela’s state-owned mining company, Minerven, has agreed to sell between 650 and 1,000 kilograms of gold dore bars to commodities trading house Trafigura.

      The multimillion-dollar arrangement, brokered by US officials, will see a shipment of gold potentially worth more than US$100 million delivered to US refineries under a separate arrangement with the US government.

      Silver price

      Silver has also experienced a volatile week, but the white metal has made bigger gains than gold, although it didn’t reach last week’s high of US$95.71 per ounce. Silver traded at an intraday low of US$81.28 on March 5 before closing at US$82.23. The following day (March 6), the price of silver closed even higher up at US$84.54.

      Monday saw silver move higher to reach US$87. Tuesday brought further gains for silver as fears that the Middle East conflict would escalate dissipated slightly and the dollar weakened. The white metal rose as high as US$89.70 in morning trading before closing up at US$88.34.

      Silver sank a bit on Wednesday morning alongside gold to as low as US$84.61 before rising to US$85.46 by 12:00pm PST.

      Silver price chart, March 5, 2026, to March 11, 2026.

      Silver price chart, March 5, 2026, to March 11, 2026.

      As the world’s most electrically and thermally conductive metal, silver is still receiving strong support from industrial demand, especially from solar panels, electric vehicles and artificial intelligence technology. The entrenched silver supply deficit also continues to provide a floor of support for the metal’s price.

      In silver mining news, major silver producer Pan American Silver’s (TSX:PAAS,NYSE:PAAS) exploration program at its La Colorada silver mine in Zacatecas, Mexico, led to the discovery of four new high-grade veins. Within about 40 percent of the holes drilled returned silver assays exceeding 1,000 grams per tonne.

      Platinum price

      Investors are increasingly using platinum as a defensive hedge alongside gold amid global instability.

      The platinum price traded above the US$2,100 per ounce mark for much of March 5, closing up at US$2,128.60. March 6 brought more volatility, with the precious metal pushing up to US$2,176.10 before closing at US$2,130.70.

      On Monday, the price of platinum had climbed as high as US$2,195 near the end of the trading day. Tuesday brought further upside for platinum prices as they rose as high as US$2,242.90 in the morning trade before closing just slightly above the US$2,200 level.

      Early Wednesday morning saw platinum slide with the other precious metals to a low of $2,166.80, but quickly spiked to US$2,218.90 before settling down to U$2,178.90 by 12:00 PST.

      Platinum price chart, March 5, 2026, to March 11, 2026.

      Platinum price chart, March 5, 2026, to March 11, 2026.

      Production remains tight as aging mines and power instability continue to plague South Africa’s platinum mining sector which accounts for more than 70 percent of global supply. Depleted above-ground stocks are providing a floor that prevents deep price collapses.

      On the demand side, automakers continue to use platinum in catalytic converters, anchoring long-term industrial demand. As for investment demand, a surge in bar and coin buying, particularly in China and India, is helping support prices.

      Palladium price

      Palladium was not immune to the volatility trend for precious metals prices this past week.

      On March 5, palladium slipped from US$1,658 per ounce to as low as US$1,635 before finishing the day at US$1,649. Palladium prices followed this pattern again on March 6 as the metal started the morning session trading at around US$1,665, later falling back down to US$1,635 again before swinging back up to an intraday high of US$1,671 before closing at US$1,656.

      On Monday, palladium gained much ground, climbing as high as US$1,715 on safe-haven demand. However, the following day palladium’s price tracked downward to close at US$1,678.50 on US dollar strength and profit-taking.

      Wednesday saw palladium trade in a range of US$1,634.50 to US$1,673.50 before hitting US$1,648.50.

      Palladium price chart, March 5, 2026, to March 11, 2026.

      Palladium price chart, March 5, 2026, to March 11, 2026.

      Palladium is facing the same pressures as the rest of the precious metals, rising global inflation fears alongside safe-haven demand. Prices for palladium may be trading at three-month lows this week, however there is lots of support for the US$1,650 to $1,700 range given supply constraints and shifts in government automotive policies.

      Persistent supply issues include production disruptions in South Africa and uncertainty over Russian exports. On the demand side, regulatory changes in Europe extending the time period when gas-powered vehicles can remain on the market means palladium will still be in demand for use in catalytic converters.

      Securities Disclosure: I, Melissa Pistilli, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

      This post appeared first on investingnews.com

      Josef Schachter, president and author at the Schachter Energy Report, shares his outlook for oil prices and stocks as the Iran war continues.

      ‘The key thing is how long does it last and what is the reason that they want the war,’ he said.

      Securities Disclosure: I, Charlotte McLeod, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

      This post appeared first on investingnews.com

      Copper is the third most-used metal in the world, and experts believe demand for this important commodity is set to rise in the coming years. At the same time, the supply situation is expected to tighten up.

      For that reason, market watchers may be asking, “When will copper go up?” Copper prices began to move sharply in 2025 amid tariff speculation and supply disruptions.

      In July 2025, copper prices on the COMEX surged to US$5.96 per pound, as US-based traders worked to get supply into the country ahead of the implementation of tariffs. However, the price plummeted back toward US$4 per pound after it was revealed that tariffs would not be applied to refined copper products.

      As the third quarter ended, a near-total shutdown at Freeport-McMoRan (NYSE:FCX) Grasberg mine in Indonesia further tightened copper supply that was already stressed due to a similar incident earlier in the year at Ivanhoe’s Kamoa-Kakula mine in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

      The price rose through the last quarter of 2025 and into 2026 when the price had climbed to new record highs of US$6.61 per pound on COMEX and US$13,842.50 on the London Metal Exchange on January 29.

      “Grasberg remains a significant disruption that will persist through 2026, and the situation is similar to constraints at Ivanhoe Mines’ Kamoa-Kakula, which experienced output cuts this year,’ Jacob White of Sprott Asset Management said via email, adding, ‘We believe these outages will keep the market in deficit in 2026.’

      Copper prices moving to record highs is a result of the latest shift toward structural deficits in the supply and demand for the red metal. In 2021, market imbalances pushed prices to a then all-time high of US$10,724.50 per metric ton, which was later broken in March 2022 when it hit US$10,730.

      Copper price chart, Q1 2003 to Q4 2025.

      Copper price chart, Q1 2003 to Q4 2025.

      Chart from International Monetary Fund via FRED.

      Copper had pulled back to about US$8,000 by mid-August 2022 on growing fears of a global recession. In early 2023, prices mounted a campaign to breach the US$9,300 level, once again giving market watchers a reason to believe highs for the metal would soon to be retested.

      However, that reason soon faded as rising interest rates dampened the outlook for copper-dependent industries globally. China’s ongoing real estate crisis also hit copper demand hard in 2023. With the demand picture unclear, copper couldn’t hold above the US$9,000 level, and slid to US$7,910 as of early October 2023.

      However, copper managed to close the year around the US$8,500 mark and hold around those levels in Q1. The closure of First Quantum Minerals’ (TSX:FM,OTCPL:FQVLF) Cobre Panama copper mine in late 2023 and Anglo American’s (LSE:AAL,OTCQX:NGLOY) revised 2024 copper production target were significant factors behind copper’s price momentum, as were production curbs out of top Chinese copper smelters are also helping to support prices.

      The copper price began climbing in earnest in Q2 on building anticipation that the Federal Reserve may soon launch its rate cut cycle alongside a worsening supply side picture. On May 20, 2024, the price of copper reached its then highest recorded price of US$5.20 per pound, or US$11,464 per metric ton.

      However, the price of the base metal moved back under US$10,000 by the end of the month, and remained largely rangebound through the rest of the year.

      In 2025, copper tariff fears and supply disruptions pushed the price of copper upwards, and it reached record highs of US$13,842.50 on the LME in late January 2026.

      Copper prices pulled back to below US$13,000 in the days that followed, and as low as US$12,560 by mid-month.

      However, demand sectors for the red metal may face fresh uncertainty in 2026 after the Supreme Court of the United States found Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs unconstitutional.

      Although the ruling won’t affect copper tariffs directly, it may cause some economic chaos as countries that worked out deals reconsider their agreements. Following the ruling, Trump imposed new 10 percent tariffs on February 20, then raised them to 15 percent the next day. The new levies will only be in effect for 150 days, after which they will need to be ratified by Congress.

      The copper price climbed above US$13,200 during trading in the days that followed.

      Despite short-term uncertainty, is long-term optimism for copper still warranted? Let’s look at the current supply and demand factors that could push copper prices higher.

      Green energy in driver’s seat for copper demand

      Copper’s many useful properties have translated into demand from diverse industries in both traditional and emerging sectors.

      In its January 2026 “Copper in the Age of AI” study, S&P Global Energy and Market Intelligence outlined key areas for copper demand and growth. Central to everything is the role copper plays in electrification due to a conductivity rating that’s second only to silver.

      Traditional demand sectors such as construction, electronic appliances and internal combustion engine vehicles have long been the main drivers for core copper demand. According to the report, 18 million metric tons of copper were required to meet this core economic demand in 2025, and the analysts forecast that number to rise to 23 million by 2040.

      Growth in core demand is expected to be driven by a combination of urbanization and rising incomes in the developing world. Every new power source, every new home and every new air conditioner is connected to the grid in some way.

      Overall, China is the world’s largest copper consumer, due in large part to its construction and real estate sectors. However, growth there has slowed in recent years as its property sector has stalled following the collapse of several large developers. The government has responded with a series of measures to try to stimulate the sector, but has yet to right the ship.

      At the end of 2025, China released its 14th Five-Year Plan, which the country will implement from 2026 to 2031. The plan has measures aimed at the real estate sector including affordable housing, the rental market and urban renewal. While it remains to be seen if these will be successful, any turnaround in China’s real estate sector could have a considerable impact on copper demand.

      Although aluminum is being substituted in some use cases due to high copper prices, there are technical hurdles such as the need for systems to be redesigned and aluminum’s lower conductivity.

      In addition to traditional growth, demand is being driven by the energy transition, including energy additions in developing nations, clean energy technologies and electric vehicles.

      As a base case, S&P expects global electricity demand to increase 50 percent by 2040, with the United States’ demand growing by 2.5 percent annually, China’s by 3.2 percent and India’s by 4.2 percent.

      This demand growth will require the energy equivalent of building 330 new hydroelectric dams the size of Nevada’s Hoover Dam or 650 1 gigawatt nuclear reactors each year between now and then.

      In 2025, solar and wind combined for more than 90 percent of new electrical capacity installed worldwide. These methods require substantial quantities of copper to build out, as do the batteries used to store the energy needed to ensure 24 hour delivery.

      Additionally, expanding access to commercial energy in developing nations will also require significant copper for infrastructure, energy transmission and more. S&P notes that Africa is home to nearly 20 percent of the world’s population, but its electricity needs are underserved. Copper will play an essential role in moving electricity across the continent.

      Downstream from generation, there is an increasing demand for EVs, which have significantly higher copper loadings than their gas-powered counterparts. In 2025, global EV sales grew by 20 percent to 20.7 million, and although the pace is likely to slow, overall demand is expected to continue to grow in the coming years.

      The AI sector is another emerging demand sector for copper, as it requires vast amounts of the red metal to deliver the energy to power data centers and manufacture the hardware that its operations run on.

      The S&P noted that half of the US gross domestic product (GDP) growth in 2025 was owed to AI. This includes processors, data centers, and electrical capacity. The study also stated that AI power requirements alone will rise from 5 percent of total US electrical demand in 2025 to 14 percent by 2030, before demand from industrial, commercial, creative and personal applications are accounted for.

      Factoring in demand from these industries and the defense sector raises 2025’s copper requirements from 18 million to 28 million metric tons, according to S&P. As these sectors grow, total copper demand is expected to hit 42 million metric tons by 2040.

      Companies struggling to keep copper supply coming

      Of course, demand is just one side of the story for copper prices. For more than a decade, the world’s largest copper mines have struggled with steadily declining copper grades and a lack of new copper discoveries.

      However, the challenge is that without new mining operations, total mined copper supply is set to rise from 23 million metric tons today to a peak of 27 million in 2030, but decline to 22 million metric tons in 2040.

      Although recycled copper is expected to add an additional 10 million metric tons of supply in 2040, this still leaves a supply deficit of 10 million metric tons.

      Declining grades at existing mines are just part of the problem facing the supply side of the equation. Since the end of the last commodity super cycle in 2011, exploration budgets have cratered from US$6.6 billion in 2012 to US$3.3 billion in 2025, and nearly half of that is spent on existing mine sites.

      According to S&P, the number of new discoveries and quantity of resources has also fallen. Between 1985 and 2000, 636 million metric tons of copper resources were discovered; this fell to 389 million metric tons between 2000 and 2010, and further to 120 million metric tons between 2010 and 2020.

      The general consensus is that the easy-to-access deposits have been found, leaving harder to access ore bodies that require longer permitting times and higher capital costs.

      Speaking about copper at the Vancouver Resources Investment Conference (VRIC) in January 2026, Founder of Rule Investment Media, Rick Rule, said, “There’s still more to be found, but it’s going to be found undercover. Let’s just say they’re pretty far off the highway. When we start spending money, we will find copper, but we haven’t started to spend money.”

      Rule went on to explain that there are challenges beyond just the money, noting jurisdictional and permitting issues. He cited the example of Rio Tinto (ASX:RIO,NYSE:RIO,LSE:RIO) and BHP’s (ASX:BHP,NYSE:BHP,LSE:BHP) Resolution Copper in Arizona, which has been stuck in permitting for 28 years.

      Delays and lack of exploration are critical factors hindering copper supply growth. On top of this, over the last several years there have also been unforeseen events that have taken supply off the market.

      These have included sociopolitical unrest and protests directed at the mining sector in Peru in 2022, the closure of First Quantum’s Cobre Panama in 2023, and, most recently, accidents at two of the world’s largest copper mines in 2025, Ivanhoe Mines’ (TSX:IVN,OTCQX:IVPAF) Kamoa-Kakula in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Freeport McMoRan’s Grasberg in Indonesia.

      Even though these types of events can’t be predicted, any supply disruptions will have an outsized impact as the supply gap widens.

      “Really, last year the market was close to equilibrium, but all the charts going forward were this widening supply gap. We’re there now. And last year we had so many major disruptions that it was nowhere near equilibrium,’ Independent Speculator CEO Lobo Tiggre said at VRIC.

      Bull market for copper or bust?

      So, when will copper go up? Together, strong demand and tight supply have already created the right market environment for higher prices, though market watchers like Rule and Tiggre still see more upside potential.

      Copper’s strong rally in recent years has encouraged the idea that even higher copper prices are ahead, which could be a golden opportunity for junior copper companies in the long-term.

      With deficits expected to increase over the coming years, analysts are setting new target prices for LME copper. The Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) raised its expectations to an average US$11,313 per metric ton in 2026, and US$13,501 in 2027. Meanwhile, Citigroup (NYSE:C) is even more bullish, predicting copper prices could climb as high as US$15,000 per metric ton as early as the second quarter of 2026.

      A widening supply gap should provide significant tailwinds in the coming years, potentially sending prices even higher.

      “Copper has done fairly well, but for most of the year, copper seemed really strangely muted in terms of price increase, and make no mistake, a supply shortfall is absolutely inevitable in copper,” Rule said.

      Price increases should also stimulate capital inflows into the industry, which Rule noted would need US$250 billion over the next 10 years to maintain the current level of production. To grow beyond that would require a much larger investment.

      Securities Disclosure: I, Dean Belder, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

      This post appeared first on investingnews.com

      CSE: NINE,OTC:VMSXF) (OTC Pink: VMSXF) (FSE: KQ9) (the ‘Company’ or ‘Nine Mile’) announces that it has proceeded with its third anniversary payment under its option to Purchase 100% of the Wedge Project, dated February 9, 2023, (the ‘Option Agreement’) with Slam Exploration Ltd. (‘Slam’).

      The company has approved and paid the required Cash Payment of $40,000 and authorized and issued the allotment of 300,000 common shares as part of the Option Agreement. The Option Agreement has one remaining payment anniversary on February 2027 requiring a Cash Payment of $50,000 and issuing 400,000 common shares and then Nine Mile will have completed the 100% Purchase of the Wedge Project from Slam. The common shares are subject to a hold period under applicable Canadian Securities laws expiring four months and one day from the issuance of the shares.

      The Wedge VMS Project consists of 35.83 km2 and hosts the Wedge Mine, West Wedge, Tribag Targets within the 8km Wedge VMS Exploration Trend. (See Figure #1 Below)

      Cannot view this image? Visit: https://images.newsfilecorp.com/files/7335/288134_55583d46a46edbf8_002full.jpg

      Figure 1: Priority Targets with Late Time Conductive Axis’ along the Wedge VMS Trend

      To view an enhanced version of this graphic, please visit:
      https://images.newsfilecorp.com/files/7335/288134_55583d46a46edbf8_002full.jpg

      Nine Mile just completed its Fall 2025 Wedge Mine Phase 2 Drill Program and is releasing Certified Drill Results as received. The goal at the Wedge Mine is to demonstrate and prove the Mine has an economic future and the deposit is much larger and higher grade than previously determined. Nine Mile is well on the way to that goal.

      Gary Lohman, P.Geo, VP Exploration & Director, stated, ‘This completes a crucial stage in the completing of the Purchase Agreement with Slam Exploration. Our advancement of the entire project including the Wedge Mine, West Wedge & Tribag High Priority VMS Targets is an example of our technical and financial commitment to this Priority Project for Nine Mile Metals and our shareholders. Assay results reported to date further demonstrate the hidden quality of the Wedge and we look forward to expanding on our recent success at the Wedge and the inaugural Drill Program along trend at the West Wedge and Tribag.’

      Cannot view this image? Visit: https://images.newsfilecorp.com/files/7335/288134_55583d46a46edbf8_003.jpg

      Figure 2: Upcoming 2026 Drill Program Targets at West Wedge and Tribag Zones

      To view an enhanced version of this graphic, please visit:
      https://images.newsfilecorp.com/files/7335/288134_55583d46a46edbf8_003full.jpg

      Patrick J Cruickshank, MBA, CEO & Director, stated, ‘The Wedge Mine and clustering targets on Trend, have quickly become, and rightly so, a priority project for us at Nine Mile. The continued success in our Wedge Mine Drill Programs clearly displays the high-grade copper ore remaining in the deposit. In 2024, drilling extended the deposit to the east and our recent drilling shows the deposit has high grade copper mineralization at depth and to the southwest. We are defining the next phase of drilling at the Wedge and the west extension. Once we complete the BHEM surveys and Mike Defrusne, President at Apex Geoscience, leading our Technical Team, integrates these new holes into our live 3D model, we will announce our Phase 3 Drill Program at the Wedge Mine, unlocking the value and test the overall size and scale of this high-grade deposit. We are excited to also launch our 2026 Drill Program at the West Wedge & Tribag sites and test those prospective VMS zones. 2026 will be a very busy exploration year.’

      Nine Mile Metals also announces that it has entered into an agreement (the ‘Agreement’) with Generation IACP Inc. (‘Generation’) to provide market making and issuer services in accordance with Canadian Securities Exchange (CSE) policies. Under the terms of the Agreement, Generation will trade shares of the Company on the CSE and other trading venues with the objective of maintaining a reasonable market and improving the liquidity of Nine Mile’s common shares. Generation IACP will also provide analytical data services on the stock trading patterns, CDS activity mapping security transfers and all aspects of issuer trading reporting, including shorts monitoring, institutional, retail, anonymous trades and market sentiment analysis.

      The Agreement is for an initial term of six months and shall be automatically renewed for successive six-month periods unless terminated by either party with 30 days prior written notice. Pursuant to the Agreement, Generation will receive a monthly fee of $8,500 Cdn, plus applicable taxes during the initial term. Thereafter, the monthly fee will automatically increase annually by 3% on each anniversary of the Agreement. No stock options or other compensation are being granted in connection with the engagement.

      Generation is arm’s length to the Company and does not own any securities of Nine Mile as of the date of this release; however, Generation and its clients may acquire an interest in the securities of the Company in the future.

      Generation’s market making and issuer service activities will be primarily intended to correct temporary imbalances in the supply and demand of the Company’s shares. Generation will be responsible for the costs it incurs in buying and selling the Company’s shares, and no third party will be providing funds or securities for the market making activities.

      ‘We have seen extremely strong trading volume and interest in Nine Mile Metal’s story from strategic, institutional, and retail investors. We traded over 90M shares through December and January 2026 and continue to have strong daily trading. We would like to monitor the trading behaviors, patterns and understand our trading base across all platforms. The relationship with Generation IACP complements our capital markets strategy and supports our focus on accessibility, transparency, and long-term shareholder alignment,’ commented Jonathan Holmes, Director.

      About Generation IACP Inc.

      Generation IACP is based in Toronto, Ontario, and is an independently held and registered broker and member of the Investment Industry Regulatory Organization of Canada, the TSX-V, the Canadian Securities Exchange, and the NEO Exchange.

      The disclosure of technical information in this news release has been prepared in accordance with Canadian regulatory requirements as set out in National Instrument 43-101 – Standards of Disclosure for Mineral Projects (‘NI 43-101’) and reviewed and approved by Gary Lohman, B.Sc., P.Geo., VP Exploration and Director who acts as the Company’s Qualified Person, and is not independent of the Company.

      About Nine Mile Metals Ltd.:

      Nine Mile Metals Ltd. is a Canadian public mineral exploration Company focused on VMS (Cu, Pb, Zn, Ag and Au) exploration in the renowned Bathurst Mining Camp (BMC), located in New Brunswick, Canada. The Company’s primary business objective is to explore its four VMS Projects: Nine Mile Brook VMS Project, California Lake VMS Project, the Canoe Landing Lake (East – West) VMS Project, and the Wedge VMS Project. The Company is focused on Critical Minerals Exploration, positioning itself for the boom in EV and green technologies requiring Copper, Silver, Lead and Zinc with a hedge on Gold.

      ON BEHALF OF Nine Mile Metals LTD.

      ‘Patrick J. Cruickshank, MBA’
      CEO and Director
      T: 506-804-6117
      E: patrick@ninemilemetals.com

      Forward-Looking Information:

      This press release may include forward-looking information within the meaning of Canadian securities legislation, concerning the business of Nine Mile. Forward-looking information is based on certain key expectations and assumptions made by the management of Nine Mile. In some cases, you can identify forward-looking statements by the use of words such as ‘will,’ ‘may,’ ‘would,’ ‘expect,’ ‘intend,’ ‘plan,’ ‘seek,’ ‘anticipate,’ ‘believe,’ ‘estimate,’ ‘predict,’ ‘potential,’ ‘continue,’ ‘likely,’ ‘could’ and variations of these terms and similar expressions, or the negative of these terms or similar expressions. Forward-looking statements in this press release include that (a) we will announce complete Certified assay results once received from ALS and Glencore. Although Nine Mile believes that the expectations and assumptions on which such forward-looking information is based are reasonable, undue reliance should not be placed on the forward-looking information because Nine Mile can give no assurance that they will prove to be correct.

      The Canadian Securities Exchange (CSE) has not reviewed and does not accept responsibility for the adequacy or the accuracy of the contents of this release.

      ___________________________________________________________________________________________________
      The Canadian Venture Building, 82 Richmond St E., Toronto, Ontario Canada M5C 1P1

      Corporate Logo

      To view the source version of this press release, please visit https://www.newsfilecorp.com/release/288134

      News Provided by TMX Newsfile via QuoteMedia

      This post appeared first on investingnews.com

      Inflation ticked up slightly in February, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported in its March release. The Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose 0.3 percent last month, up from 0.2 percent in January. On a year-over-year basis, headline inflation was unchanged at 2.4 percent.

      Core inflation, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, rose 0.2 percent in February, down from 0.3 percent in January. On a year-over-year basis, core inflation was unchanged at 2.5 percent.

      The uptick in headline CPI reflected rising food and energy prices. Shelter, which accounts for about one-third of the index, rose 0.2 percent and was, according to the BLS, “the largest factor in the all items monthly increase.” Food prices rose 0.4 percent, with food at home increasing 0.4 percent and food away from home rising 0.3 percent. The index for energy also increased in February, rising 0.6 percent, driven by a 0.8 percent increase in gasoline prices. These figures reflect price data collected before the recent spike in oil from the conflict involving Iran and the disruption to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz.

      The easing in core CPI reflected a mixed picture across categories. Medical care posted the largest increase among core components, rising 0.5 percent, followed by apparel, which surged 1.3 percent. Airline fares rose 1.4 percent, and household furnishings and operations increased 0.3 percent. Prices also rose for education. 

      Offsetting these gains were declining prices for communication, which fell 0.5 percent, used cars and trucks, which declined 0.4 percent, and motor vehicle insurance, which fell 0.3 percent. Personal care also declined. In short, the categories that saw lower prices more than offset those where prices rose, pulling core inflation below its January pace.

      While the year-over-year figures continue to show gradual disinflation, the recent three-month trend tells a somewhat different story. Inflation averaged 0.27 percent per month across December (0.3 percent), January (0.2 percent), and February (0.3 percent), which is equivalent to a roughly 3.2 percent annual rate. That is well above the year-over-year figure of 2.4 percent, suggesting that the recent pace of price increases is running hotter than the trailing 12-month average. Part of that gap likely reflects missing housing data resulting from last year’s government shutdown that held down the year-over-year inflation rate.

      Recent core CPI data tell a similar story. Core prices rose 0.2 percent in December, 0.3 percent in January, and 0.2 percent in February — an average monthly rise of roughly 0.23 percent, which is equivalent to a roughly 2.8 percent annual rate. That’s higher than the year-over-year core figure of 2.5 percent, meaning core inflation has also been running somewhat hotter in recent months compared to its year-over-year pace.

      Although the Federal Reserve officially targets the personal consumption expenditures price index (PCEPI), the steady February CPI report offers little reason to expect an imminent pivot toward easier policy. According to the CME Group’s FedWatch tool, markets are assigning a 99 percent probability that the Fed will hold rates steady at its meeting next week. Markets’ expectations that the policy stance remains at least through July were modestly boosted as well. 

      Even with the real shock to the economy from higher oil prices, policymakers are likely to look past them as a temporary energy spike — especially if longer-run inflation expectations remain well anchored. More relevant for monetary policy is whether overall nominal spending — that is, the total amount of money households and businesses are spending across the economy — is growing at a pace consistent with stable prices. By that standard, the recent inflation data offer an ambiguous signal. While the year-over-year inflation numbers look reassuring, the three-month annualized pace above three percent suggests underlying demand is running somewhat stronger than the trailing 12-month figures imply.

      Factoring in the latest labor market data, the picture is more mixed. February’s employment report showed a 92,000 decline in payrolls, a figure some observers have taken as evidence that the labor market is weakening. The unemployment rate held steady at 4.4 percent, and both the labor force participation rate and the employment-to-population ratio were essentially unchanged. Wages are still rising at roughly a 3.8 percent annual pace, pointing to continued growth in nominal spending. 

      Even with a dip in payrolls, those dynamics remain broadly consistent with nominal spending expanding faster than would be needed to keep inflation at the Fed’s two-percent target over time. In that environment, easing policy too quickly could risk reigniting price pressures. For now, patience remains the safer course.