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Critical Elements Lithium Corp V.CRE

Alternate Symbol(s):  CRECF

Critical Elements Lithium Corp is a Canada-based mining exploration company. The Company is engaged in the acquisition, exploration, development and processing of critical minerals mining properties in Canada. Its projects include Rose Lithium-Tantalum, Rose North, Rose South, Arques, Bourier, Dumulon, Duval, Nisk, Lemare, Caumont, and Valiquette. The Rose Lithium-Tantalum property consists of over 473 claims covering a total area of over 246.55 square kilometers (km2). It lies in the northeastern part of Superior Province, within the Eastmain greenstone belt. The Rose North property consists of about 31 claims covering a total area of over 16.14 km2. The Arques Property is composed of one block totaling around 136 claims covering an area of 6,840.93 hectares (ha) over 18 kilometers (kms) in length in a Southwest-Northeast direction. The Bourier Property is comprised of over 304 claims with an area of 15,616.47 ha for over 30 kms. The Rose South property consists of over 280 claims.


TSXV:CRE - Post by User

Comment by Montreal1010on Dec 20, 2017 12:52pm
200 Views
Post# 27197210

RE:RE:RE:Canaccord is examining offers

RE:RE:RE:Canaccord is examining offersHi guys,  

It would have been nice to have an agreement before the Holidays but the management probably did the shareholders a favour by looking for other options.

Right now CRE is still trading at a fraction of it's NPV. The high quality products and experienced management are surely getting attention from majors and solid partners.

Lithium X definitely left money on the table. Here's an article from the FP, it's interesting to see that the company was contacted by many parties and that Nextview raised funds for opportunities in the new energy sector. The Lithium market should keep getting more and more interesting in 2018.

MTL1010

Link to article:
https://business.financialpost.com/commodities/mining/chinas-appetite-for-lithium-on-display-in-canadian-takeover#comments-area
 
China's appetite for lithium on display in Canadian takeover
Beijing and Shanghai-based Nextview New Energy Lion Hong Kong will pay $2.61 cash per share for Vancouver's Lithium X, a TSX-listed exploration and development company

Gabriel Friedman
December 19, 20175:06 PM EST
Filed under
         Commodities Mining
In a sign the race to secure the materials for electric vehicle batteries is heating up, a Chinese-backed investment group said it would pay $265 million to purchase a Canadian lithium exploration company with no reported income.
 
Under the deal announced on Monday, Beijing and Shanghai-based Nextview New Energy Lion Hong Kong will pay $2.61 cash per share, reflecting a 22.5 per cent premium on the closing price on Dec. 15 of Vancouver’s Lithium X, a TSX-listed exploration and development company with lithium projects in Argentina.
 
This marks Nextview’s second deal in as many weeks to secure access to lithium, having last week purchased a 20 per cent stake in Banacora Minerals, which has a lithium project in Mexico. Nor is it the only Chinese company making such deals: Earlier this year, Sinochem, China’s state chemical company along with several other Chinese companies placed competing bids to purchase a $4 billion stake in Chile’s SQM, a giant lithium producer. 
 
China already has more electric vehicles on its roads than any other country, according to a McKinsey & Company report released this summer, which also found that the country’s lithium ion battery companies control an estimated 25 per cent of the global supply. Those companies need lithium to continue their production, and questions persist about where it will come from.
 
HEDGING BETS
“There’s just a lot of skepticism around lithium and is there really enough to meet the coming demand?” said Ian McClenny, an analyst with Navigant Research, a division of the accounting firm Navigant. “Everyone is seemingly just trying to hedge their bets, so that there won’t be any bottlenecks.”
 
 
The deals point to the rapidly growing lithium ion battery market, the key form of rechargeable batteries used in electric vehicles. McClenny said that Navigant estimates the market for lithium ion batteries for many of the main types of electric vehicles will reach $42.9 billion this year and hit $103.2 billion by 2026.
 
Bassam Moubarak, chief financial officer of Lithium X, credited his company’s 29-year-old chief executive, Brian Paes-Braga, with predicting a shift toward electric vehicles that would spur demand for lithium when he founded the company in 2015.
 
Even though none of the company’s projects are producing lithium yet, and thus have no revenue, Moubarak said the $265 million offer reflects the growth in value of its assets.
 
“We’re at a point that there’s a lot of interest in lithium,” he said. “We had a lot of parties contact over us the last year.”
 
Lithium X joined the TSX in 2015 through a reverse merger with Royce Resources Corp, a company in which serial mining entrepreneur Frank Giustra was a major shareholder, Moubarak said. In an online interview in 2016, Paes-Braga referred to Giustra as a mentor.
Since 2015, it has acquired several lithium projects, including its flagship Sal de Los Angeles lithium brine project in Argentina’s Salta region. It holds more than 1 million tonnes of indicated reserves of lithium carbonate equivalent plus one million inferred tonnes, according to a National Instrument 43-101 report.
 
FEASIBILITY STUDY
 
Moubarak said his company is not yet extracting lithium at Sal de Los Angeles, and the next step is to conduct a feasibility study to determine what size project would maximize cash flows.
 
Lithium X also holds a 19 per cent stake in Pure Energy Minerals, which has a lithium project in Nevada, and it has a second project in Argentina.
 
In October, Lithium X’s auditors filed financial statements that said the company had no recurring source of income except the interest accrued on its cash, approximately $19 million in working capital (as of June 2017) and that the company had historically posted negative cash flows.
 
Its shareholders will vote on the deal in February.
 
Nextview will pay a $20 million break fee if it walks away from the deal. The company also said it raised a US$1.5 billion fund in 2017, along with others, to invest in overseas mining assets with a focus on the new energy sector.
 
Officials from Nextview could not be reached for comment.  
 
The company has not disclosed its exact strategy to develop the assets held by Lithium X, but said it is focused on the electric vehicle and new energy market.
 
Its other investments include Nanjing Yuebo Auto Electronics Co., Ltd., which supplies products to 100,000 electric vehicles in China annually, according to a press release announcing the deal.
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