Research: Apex Critical Metals Corp.
OTC: APXCF
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How SpaceX Solved One Of The Greatest Hurdles To Space Exploration… And The Rare Metal That Helped Make It Possible.
“With respect to space, I think there’s really just one problem, which is a fully and rapidly reusable orbital rocket. This is the holy grail.”
– CEO SpaceX
Apex Critical Metals Corp. (OTC: APXCF, CSE: APXC) aims to solve the material shortage of Niobium – an all-important metal required in the technology advancements of space, aeronautics and quantum computing.
Earlier this year, on its fourth attempt, SpaceX’s Super Heavy starship pulled off a modern miracle.
Not only did it launch the largest ship ever to fly into space… But it successfully returned its booster rockets back down to earth.
By creating and designing reusable rockets, SpaceX has brought the price of spacefaring missions crashing down.
It used to cost over $50,000 per kilogram to launch anything into space. With the starship, that cost has dropped to $200 per kilogram.
How much does it cost to launch a spacecraft into orbit? A lot less than it used to, thanks to innovation by SpaceX. Here’s a look at the cost per kilogram for space launches across the globe since 1960.
By making space travel so affordable — to the point startups can now launch satellites and experiments into space — we’ve entered an entirely new era of human history. And the conversation around space has shifted forever.
The space age that was officially launched with Sputnik and Apollo, has become accessible to everyone.
Heck, Virgin Galactic is even unveiling a space hotel that’s expected to open in the coming years.
Some like to talk about the complex mathematics that made it possible — or the intense engineering.
Some think it’s due to the will of Great Men who created SpaceX, Blue Origin, and Virgin Galactic, which have helped us enter a new, exciting age of discovery and exploration.
But when you ask the mathematicians and engineers what made it possible, you’re likely to get a surprising answer.
They’re likely to tell you we’re riding on the back of niobium.
In fact, it was a niobium-based alloy that allowed for SpaceX to shorten the nozzle on the rocket thrusters, allowing for more thrust at a faster rate.
While that may seem like a minor shift, it has massive implications. It’s one of the many factors SpaceX has worked to perfect, in order to launch increased payloads like the Super Heavy starship.
The US has declared niobium the second-most critical resource in the nation.
As the need for lighter and stronger materials continues to grow in today’s modern technology, Apex Critical Metals Corp. (OTC: APXCF, CSE: APXC) could potentially be the speculative investment of the decade!
That’s just one of the reasons why this off-radar metal might just be the most valuable resource on earth today.
And not just because of what it can do, but because of how rare it is.
In November 2022, WA1 Resources drilled the first holes into a magnetic anomaly in western Australia. The company didn’t start producing anything. They didn’t prove or define a resource.
Under normal circumstances, exploratory drill holes wouldn’t move the needle — almost regardless of what it found.
But because WA1 found the presence of niobium when drilling, shares went from 15 cents to a high of $22.80 — a 150x return.
If you think that sounds insane, that’s because it is. Exploration companies don’t see these kinds of massive returns without proven resources.
But niobium is different.
Apex Critical Metals Corp. (OTC: APXCF, CSE: APXC) is one of a handful of companies working to solve the critical supply shortage of Niobium needed in the space economy – a market Forbes Magazine estimates at $1.8 trillion by 2035.
Without niobium, the Space Age would never have gotten off the ground. our fastest planes would still use propellers, and our military would be stuck using 20th century technology.
It’s no exaggeration to say that modern technology wouldn’t exist without niobium. But that’s not the primary reason even the possibility of a domestic discovery can send a company’s stock soaring.
The biggest reason that discovering niobium is a license to print money?
It is incredibly rare.
About 80% of worldwide production comes from a single mine in Brazil owned by CBBM. Together with two other mines — another in Brazil, the third in Canada — almost all niobium comes from just three sources.
And China is trying to corner the market. It’s stockpiling niobium and investing in the mines — with a 15% stake in the big CBBM one.
It’s no wonder the US has declared niobium the second-most critical resource in the world — because of its importance and scarcity.
Or that the potential of a substantial new niobium find can launch a stock like WA1 to 150x its previous value.
That’s why investors are now looking to Apex Critical Metals Corp. (OTC: APXCF, CSE: APXC) as the next company that could see similar growth.
Especially because Apex Critical Metals Corp. is led by a team that has developed critical resources before – and has taken them from start up to billion-dollar valuations.
Investors who follow the name Jody Dahrouge know what to expect when it comes to his track record with mining ventures.
When exploration companies think they may have found a project of value, they bring in Dahrouge and his 150+ person mineral consultancy to prove out the resource.
The famed geologist has already launched two exploration companies, Patriot Battery Metals, and Fission Energy, that rocketed in value, with share prices seeing 5X and 52X growth over the last 5 years.
And when it comes to niobium, he’s one of the few people who has found valuable caches of the silver metal.
Now Dahrouge and his team have spotted a large magnetic anomaly in British Columbia, Canada.
The anomaly is made up of carbonatite, the host material for some of the most valuable forms of niobium. Traces of niobium have also been identified at the surface, and some initial drill holes have found concentrations of it in the ground.
Later this year, Apex Critical Metals Corp. is planning to send exploratory drill holes into the magnetic anomaly. If that carbonatite is rich with niobium as they believe it to be, Apex Critical Metals Corp. (OTC: APXCF, CSE: APXC) could be the next company to safeguard North America from the coming supply crunch.
With the global space sector projected to roughly triple in size in short order, growing to over $1.8 trillion by 2035… niobium production is going to have to gear up quickly.
Just based on current need, niobium demand is growing around 10% a year.
According to Technavio, over the course of just the next four years, the global niobium market is expected to climb by more than $480 million.
That’s a substantial spike, when considering the market in 2023 was only valued at $1.54 billion.
In that same timeframe, production is only expected to double – from around 97k tons, to 189k tons.
Now keep in mind, that those projections are based primarily on niobium’s current use in electronics, as well as infrastructure needs. One of the greatest applications for niobium at the moment is in the development of steel alloys used for the construction of railways, bridges, and buildings.
But that’s only the tip of the iceberg.
That’s not taking into account the numerous industries that are still in proof-of-concept phase – such as the applications for nuclear energy production and storage, next generation batteries and electric vehicles, the superconductors quantum computing will require, or the new military technologies that are sure to come as conflicts continue to ignite across the globe.
And it certainly doesn’t account for the innovations that will continue to ramp up as niobium ushers in the new Space Age.
Niobium has been an essential component of aerospace applications going back to the Mercury and Apollo programs.
In fact, space travel would not have been originally possible without one niobium alloy variant – a refractory superalloy called C103 – made of 89% niobium, hafnium, zirconium, and titanium. Base metals could not have withstood the extreme temperatures present at launch, at re-entry, or in the cold expanse of space.
Developed in 1965, Niobium C-103 was originally used in the rocket nozzles of the Apollo Lunar Command Module, which served as the living quarters for the crew.
The versatile metal has long been trusted to enhance the performance and reliability of spacecraft – from its use in superconducting materials, to rocket engines, thermal protection systems, and electronics. But as new alloys are discovered, niobium has the capacity to truly modernize space travel.
When combined with this unique superconducting material, ordinary metals get a substantial upgrade – making them stronger, lighter, and more resilient.
More importantly, niobium superalloys are also thermal-resistant, non-corrosive, and non-erosive.
That’s why critical components like the MVac rocket booster nozzle and the superheated fuel containers, which have to maintain structural integrity under the intense conditions of rocket propulsion, are built with niobium superalloys.
Niobium is also used in the thermal coatings that protect engine components from temperatures exceeding 3,632 degrees Fahrenheit.
And in the development of the heat shield materials that protect the spacecraft and the crew from extreme temperatures experienced during re-entry.
That re-entry is key to minimizing the costs of space travel – a feat that would otherwise remain economically unfeasible if not for niobium.
But that’s just one of many billion-dollar industries this unique metal is transforming.
With applications for advanced medical devices, superconducting magnets, and capacitors – niobium is also ushering in a new era of military invention.
The military and defense sector, a $2.4 trillion marketplace in its own right, may be the greatest driver of new niobium demand today.
Niobium can make a jet’s body stronger with HSLA steel, it allows engines to run hotter using superalloys, and it hardens the electronics and avionics against both high-stress use and potential attacks from an adversary.
It does the same for any military gear that travels along land, or through water.
Indeed — in everything from remote controls for drones to laser-based weaponry, niobium is one of the only materials that can efficiently conduct electricity, lower weight, increase strength, and resist corrosion and erosion.
Experts have long thought hypersonic missiles were economically unachievable. Thanks to niobium, that’s no longer the case.
China has working hypersonic missiles. Russia — perhaps dubiously — claims the same.
The US has been fast at work spinning up its own hypersonic program to compete. In a joint effort, the U.S. Army and Navy just completed a test flight of the Lockheed Martin / Northrop Grumman prototype this past June – and the first missiles are expected to be delivered sometime this year.
This new long-range hypersonic weapon, aptly named the Dark Eagle, has a reported range of 1,725 miles. Armed with hypersonic missiles that travel 3,800 miles per hour, they can reach the top of the Earth’s atmosphere and remain just beyond the range of air and missile defense systems until they are ready to strike.
Timing couldn’t be better for this next-generation technology.
With major conflicts ongoing in Europe and the middle East, along with deteriorating foreign relations between great powers, new domestic sources of niobium are quickly becoming a matter of national security.
And with niobium supply so concentrated — and none being produced in the US — most defense industries are vulnerable to supply shocks.
That’s why niobium is listed as the second-most critical material by the US — and why the US is not alone in attempting to secure a dependable, safe supply.
Without niobium, military industries could only produce second-rate weaponry and defensive systems – and pay more for it.
More than commercial aerospace, more than our power supply or battery advances, the defense industry needs niobium in order to compete in today’s world.
Apex Critical Metals Corp. (OTC: APXCF, CSE: APXC) is positioning themselves to meet that demand, with exploration well underway to bolster domestic supply.
The USGS hasn’t labeled niobium the second-most critical supply just because of its wide array of current and potential uses.
It’s also because it is extremely hard to find in the sorts of concentrations that make mining worth it.
According to some estimates, there are really only four areas with significant production — two in Brazil, one in Canada, and a smaller one in Australia.
Brazil is the powerhouse of niobium production, accounting for over 91% of the global supply. The primary producer is Companhia Brasileira de Metalurgia e Mineração (CBMM), which controls 75% of Brazil’s output.
Major mining operations include the Araxá and Catalão mines, which are crucial to Brazil’s niobium industry. Annual production from these two mines comes to around 120,000 metric tons.
Meanwhile, China has increased its involvement in the niobium market through investments and acquisitions. In 2011, a consortium of five Chinese companies acquired a 15% stake in CBMM.
Further, China Molybdenum Co. Ltd. (CMOC) acquired the Chapadão and Boa Vista mines, enhancing its influence in the sector.
Like we’ve seen with many other critical minerals and metals, that puts China in the driver’s seat when it comes to control of production.
Canada also plays a minor role, although it is only around 1/10 the size of Brazil’s production. Magris Performance Materials operates the Niobec mine in Quebec, which is one of the only significant sources of niobium outside of Brazil.
This mine produces niobium in the form of ferroniobium, an alloy crucial for steel manufacturing because of its considerable iron concentration.
What’s more, this Canadian producer appears to have similar geology to Apex Critical Metals Corp.’s (OTC: APXCF, CSE: APXC) CAP project in British Columbia.
That’s why so many eyes are now turning to a new domestic explorer.
Just to the northeast of Prince George in British Columbia, Apex Critical Metals Corp. (OTC: APXCF, CSE: APXC) has acquired the mineral rights to land hosting a large magnetic anomaly.
Now, with its high concentrations of iron, ferroniobium just happens to create a strong magnetic signature – similar in characteristics to the anomaly the company has identified.
What’s more, initial surface surveys have found niobium in encouraging concentrations.
Through further study of the surrounding geology, the team at Apex Critical Metals Corp. believes there’s a strong chance they’ve found the world’s fifth large cache of niobium.
The first drill holes have already been sunk, and identified promising concentrations of niobium, ranging from 0.19% up to 3.38% Nb205 – as seen in the map above.
A neighboring project 250 km to the northwest has identified a resource at comparable concentrations, that has established preliminary findings of 285 million tons (measured and indicated) and 144 million tons (inferred) – heightening the expectation of a substantial find.
Later this year, a larger exploratory drilling program will commence and further define the niobium under the surface.
It is possible the magnetic anomaly will primarily be made up of something other than niobium. Rare earth metals along with many other semi-precious and industrially important metals have been found in surface surveys as well.
But there is little doubt there is a large formation not too deep underground at this site – that most certainly contains a valuable magnetic material.
After looking at all the data, the team at Apex Critical Metals Corp. believes niobium to be the most likely suspect, and they have a considerable history of success in this area.
A few years back, this same team founded Patriot Battery Metals — one of the largest and most successful lithium miners in Canada. Patriot Battery Metals went from a tiny microcap to a significant producer with a market cap well in excess of $1 billion at its height.
In the early 2000s, Scrapmore Minerals wanted to start producing uranium — so they turned to this team. They found three viable sites, and eventually created a very profitable exit when those projects were sold to Fission Energy.
This is exactly the sort of exploration that Dahrouge and his team specialize in – green field early exploration for critically important — and often critically undersupplied materials.
Time and again the team behind Apex Critical Metals Corp. (OTC: APXCF, CSE: APXC) has continued to deliver.
Today, they believe they may have their most important find to date.
Should Apex Critical Metals Corp. find what the company expects in its BC property…
It could fast become the owner of one of the most important mines in North America.
A metal, remember, that our military needs to operate, batteries need to advance, rockets need to fire, and our electronics need to survive difficult conditions and demanding use cases.
That our energy infrastructure needs — both to produce energy with efficient turbines, and to store it in advanced storage solutions. Especially in the instance that a geopolitical shift take Brazil’s massive niobium reserves offline.
It is no exaggeration to say niobium is one of the most important metals in the economy today. And the next company to bring new supply will benefit handsomely. Apex Critical Metals Corp. (OTC: APXCF, CSE: APXC) believes it will be that company.
Niobium is crucial for defense systems. From F-35s to the next generation of Navy ships, niobium superalloys are making possible faster and stronger jets, faster and stronger boats, and protecting the electronics that all systems run on.
The space industry, on its way to becoming a $1 trillion sector, relies heavily on niobium. Reusable rockets have made space travel more affordable, but the industry’s success depends on niobium’s strength, heat resistance, and durability to ensure reliable launches.
Apex Critical Metals Corp. has discovered a large carbonatite magnetic anomaly in BC, Canada, with niobium found at the surface. Initial drill holes revealed economically viable concentrations, and a major drilling program is planned for later this year. Apex could follow the successful path set by WA1.
The most recent niobium find — still undefined — propelled WA1 stock from 15 cents to $22.80, a 150x return. This proves the hunger for more sources of niobium — and the riches that await the next successful projects.
Niobium supply is extremely limited, with almost everything produced at just three sites. Two of those sites are in Brazil, and China has strong investments in both.
The niobium market is one of the most important in the world. It is projected to grow 10% a year over the next few years, but as applications grow — especially in space and defense — that is likely a conservative estimate.
Of course, past performance is no guarantee of future results, and investing in small-cap companies in any industry should be considered risky.
Despite the great promise, Apex Critical Metals Corp. (OTC: APXCF, CSE: APXC) should still be considered a speculative investment.
Nevertheless, it’s not uncommon for small-cap resource companies to see rapid growth in share value, handing early investors spectacular returns from their modest initial investments. In other words: These can sometimes be very profitable opportunities.
And with the price of many established mining stocks now reaching $50 to $100 per share, and the price of Niobium continuing upwards, junior resource companies like Apex Critical Metals Corp. often offer attractive risk-to-reward ratios.
You can often pick up a thousand shares for a relatively modest amount.
Do your due diligence, but consider adding Apex Critical Metals Corp. (OTC: APXCF, CSE: APXC) to your speculative portfolio.
For more information about Apex Critical Metals Corp. (OTC: APXCF, CSE: APXC), check out the company’s website https://apexcriticalmetals.com
The time to investigate Apex Critical Metals Corp. is now, before it captures a significant share of the North American Niobium market.
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Mineral exploration and development are highly speculative and are characterized by a number of significant inherent risks, which may result in the inability to successfully develop projects for commercial, technical, political, regulatory or financial reasons, or if successfully developed, may not remain economically viable for their mine life owing to any of the foregoing reasons. There is no assurance that Apex Critical Metal Corp. will be successful in achieving a return on shareholders’ investment and the likelihood of success must be considered in light of the [early] stage of operations.
Apex Critical Metal’s ability to identify Mineral Resources in sufficient quantity and quality to justify development activities and/or its ability to commence and complete development work and/or commence and/or sustain commercial production operations at any of its projects will depend upon numerous factors, many of which are beyond its control, including exploration success, the obtaining of funding for all phases of exploration, development and commercial mining, the adequacy of infrastructure, geological characteristics, metallurgical characteristics of any deposit, the availability of processing technology and capacity, the availability of storage capacity, the supply of and demand for niobium and other minerals, the availability of equipment and facilities necessary to commence and complete development, the cost of consumables and mining and processing equipment, technological and engineering problems, accidents or acts of sabotage or terrorism, civil unrest and protests, currency fluctuations, changes in regulations, the availability of water, the availability and productivity of skilled labour, the receipt of necessary consents, permits and licenses (including mining licenses), and political factors, including unexpected changes in governments or governmental policies towards exploration, development and commercial mining activities.
Furthermore, cost over-runs or unexpected changes in commodity prices in any future development could make the projects uneconomic, even if previously determined to be economic under feasibility studies. Accordingly, notwithstanding the positive results of one or more feasibility studies on the projects, there is a risk that Apex Critical Metal Corp. would be unable to complete development and commence commercial mining operations at one or more of the mineral properties which would have a material adverse effect its business, financial condition, results of operations and prospects.
For a more comprehensive overview of the risks related to Apex Critical Metal’s business, please review Apex Critical Metal Corp.’s continuous disclosure documents, each filed under the Company’s profile at www.sedarplus.ca.
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