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Koryx Copper Inc V.KRY

Alternate Symbol(s):  KRYXF

Koryx Copper Inc. is a Canadian copper development company focused on advancing the 100% owned, PEA-stage Haib Copper Project in Namibia whilst also building a portfolio of copper exploration licenses in Zambia. Haib is a large and advanced copper/molybdenum porphyry deposit in southern Namibia. The Haib Copper project, Exploration and Prospecting License 3140, is held by Haib Minerals (PTY) Ltd, a Namibian corporation fully held by the Company. It holds the option to acquire up to 80% of three large scale exploration licenses in the copper belt in Zambia. The licenses include Luanshya West project (LEL 23247), Chililabombwe project (LEL 23247), and Mpongwe project (LEL 23248). The licenses cover about 752 square kilometers in the Central African Copper belt. LEL 23247 is situated in the center of the Zambian Copper belt, which forms part of the Central African Copper belt. The three licenses sits on the same side of the Copperbelt, which hosts nine large copper mines.


TSXV:KRY - Post by User

Post by Yepnewpapyon Oct 20, 2021 9:14am
102 Views
Post# 34026233

Copper price bull trend

Copper price bull trendhttps://www.kitco.com/news/2021-10-19/-Revenge-of-the-old-economy-copper-oil-expected-to-run-even-higher.html
 
Mining News

'Revenge of the old economy' - copper, oil expected to run even higher

Oil could hit $90 a barrel and copper could see between $11,000 to $12,000 a tonne, said Goldman Sachs' Global Head of Commodities Research Jeff Currie on Bloomberg.

Currie's interview was released early this week.

Copper prices rose today on decades-low supplies and an extreme shortages, according to a report from Reuters. Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange rose 1.5% to $10,351 a tonne. U.S. Brent Crude prices have more than doubled in the past year and traded above $85 a barrel today.

Metals are in a super cycle due to a confluence of events after the pandemic, and the resource sector can't keep up due to years of under investment.

"Poor returns in the old economy saw capital redirected away from the old economy and towards the new economy, basically taking from the Exxon's of the world and giving to the Netflix's of the world," said Currie.
With years of poor returns in the resource and energy space, investors are not investing anytime soon. Adding more oil supply from the U.S. is problematic, since oil producers haven't been investing, and getting them to invest is going to require a much higher oil price.

"Today the focus is on return on equity. The focus here is not on the dollar price of oil, but where [the energy investor's] stock price is and the access to capital," notes Currie.

Currie adds that environmental social governance hurdles create an even higher hurdle rate for getting oil producers to invest.

"There is a cost of capital associated with de-carbonization and we're going to find out what that cost is," said Currie.

High oil prices cascade into refining. Aluminum, which has high energy needs, has seen prices skyrocketZinc has also run up due to European smelters having to close.

"When the wind quit blowing, the market had to replace that wind power generation with natural gas, and there was no gas, which created a massive price spike," said Currie.

"[These] transient events are going to have higher probability and more frequent in nature. There is a persistency of transitory events."
Currie defines a super cycle as bottom up and driven by sweeping, structural policies, citing China's admission to the World Trade Organization in the 2000s or President Lyndon Johnson's War On Poverty in the '70s.

"Every commodity super cycle is driven by low income groups, as well as every bout of inflation," said Currie. "Inflation and commodity bull markets are directly tied to populist policies, and I can't find an exception to that."
By Michael McCrae
For Kitco News
 


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