April 19, 2024

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Ceylon Graphite (CYL.V) crowned at Hong Kong Mining Conference

600 mega-rich “buy-side” investors controlling $1.1 trillion in assets, descended on Hong Kong last week for the Asia Mines and Money conference.

There were also hundreds of resource companies in attendance.  Six of them were short-listed for the Asia Pacific Mining Exploration Company of the Year:  Blackham Resources, Ceylon Graphite, CleanTeQ, New Century Resources, Novo Resources, SolGold.

The front-runner was Novo Resources (NVO.V) – a $690 million company with a monster gold asset in Western Australia.

But that’s not how it went down.

The winner was a $9.5 million micro-cap Ceylon Graphite (CYL.V), that owns most of the known graphite deposits in Sri Lanka – a country which-is-to-graphite as New Zealand-is-to-sheep.

“This is excellent news,” stated CEO Bharat Parashar after the ceremony, “The award speaks directly to the quality of the extensive exploration work the company has carried out in Sri Lanka…we are close to being able to bring significant new quantities of high purity Sri Lankan graphite to the market.”

We hate to tell the Hong Kong Mines and Money jury, “I told you so” – but we did.

On February 26, 2018 we wrote that “Ceylon Graphite is building a better mouse Trap.”

In a television interview, Parashar recently made two astonishing statements:  1. Ceylon Graphite will likely never have a 43-101 resource estimate 2. Ceylon Graphite could build 120 mines.

For a typical mineral extraction company, this is like saying, “I don’t have a driver’s licence – I’m not planning on getting one – but I’ll probably win the Indy 500 a dozen times.”

“To understand the method to Parashar’s madness – you need to know a little about the history and the geology of Sri Lanka,” we wrote, “A hundred years ago there were more than 200 mines in Sri Lanka and the country exported 33,000 metric tons of graphite – meeting 40% of the world’s demand.

The Sri Lankan miners dug in the mud metal claws.  When they hit rock – they stopped.

Needless to say, this left some graphite in the ground.  Ceylon plans to build numerous ultra low-capex graphite mines and chase the minerals with modern mining technology.

On March 22, 2018 CYL announced significant advancements at the K1and K2 sites in Sri Lanka.  The upgraded shaft has now reached a depth of over 190 feet.

There are now tunnels at several levels on either side of the main shaft. These tunnels have been cut through hard rock and form the basis of the previous mining operation at this site.

CYL discovered three new large graphite veins in the 25 to 30 cm range at the 180 ft. level tunnels.

Ceylon Graphite also began drilling at its K2 site. Work has also commenced on obtaining a mining license for the M1 site.

“We are accelerating our work underground and are confident in our ability to become a near-term graphite producer of some of the world’s purest naturally occurring graphite,” stated Parashar.

In November, 2017 Chris Parry pointed out that Ceylon “owns a pair of drilling rigs, so they can drill all day, every day, at minimal outlay.  To dig any graphite out will be extremely cheap when compared to North American sources.”

Ceylon’s graphite is freakishly high grade, close to the surface, and already permitted for production.

Parashar estimates his cash costs at $200/tonne; large flake graphite sells between $1,250 and $5,000 per tonne.

All this is the “pointy end” of the Ceylon story.

If “Industrial Minerals Flake 97% C, +80 mesh” doesn’t do it for you – how about a $6 trillion infrastructure project that is barrelling right down Ceylon’s highway?

China’s massive “One Belt, One Road” initiative was much talked about at the Hong Kong Mines and Money conference.

This project is going to re-arrange global trading routes.

Western investors have only just begun to wrap their heads around it.

While U.S. President Donald Trump dismissed the continent of Africa as a collection of “shit hole” countries, the Chinese have an initiated infrastructure initiative, linking China to Europe, India and Africa.

The Belt and Road initiative opens up 7 corridors.

  • New Eurasian Land Bridge – Western China to Western Russia
  • China–Mongolia–Russia Corridor -Northern China to Eastern Russia
  • China–Central Asia – Western China to Turkey
  • China–Indochina Peninsula – Southern China to Singapore
  • China-Bangladesh–India Corridor – Southern China to Myanmar
  • China–Pakistan Corridor – South-Western China to Pakistan
  • Maritime Silk Road – Chinese Coast to Mediterranean

It is the largest mega-project in history, covering more than 68 countries that contain 65% of the world’s population and drive 40% of the global GDP.

Sri Lanka has signed a $1.1 billion deal with China to develop the southern deep-sea port of Hambantota.

This development will directly benefit Sri Lankan resource exporters to China.  Currently, Sri Lanka’s top exports to China are clothing, cocoa, woven fabric, footwear and rubber.

China also desperately needs premium grade large-flake graphite – required for electric vehicles.

Sri Lanka has the world’s highest purity graphite.

A recent report by Allied Market Research predicts that the global graphite market will increase 44% in the next 7 years from $13 billion to $18.8 billion.

We rub elbows with a lot of CEOs.  The bright ones, with a plan – and the balls and to pull it off – usually stand out.

We believe Parashar is onto something.  It’s nice to see the mining community in Hong Kong agree with us.

FULL DISCLOSURE: Ceylon Graphite is an Equity Guru marketing client, and we own stock.

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5 thoughts on “Ceylon Graphite (CYL.V) crowned at Hong Kong Mining Conference”

  1. OK thks and why is the market cap just around 10m when the interest is so big and the potential so so high ?
    W

    1. Wilddieb, it’s good and fair question: honestly I feel the money is chasing other sectors now (weed, block chain, energy metals), but the graphite demand is real. It’s not going away. Another factor is that blue sky stories usually center around one event (the building of a mine/FDA drug approval…) whereas CYL is going to build revenue in increments. That’s harder to sell, and it may be damaging the stock price. I believe in this CEO, I believe in this company. I appreciate you reading and commenting.

    1. Ben, All exploration companies have to raise capital. The $2 million raise is for “current exploration”. So nothing alarming or unusual about that. In a “non-brokered financing”, the company sells the stock (or other security) directly to investors – avoiding brokerage fees and delays. The company also has the ability to hand-select investors.
      In a brokered financing a company like Canaccord will take $2 million worth of stock and sell it to its clients at a profit. Make a note of that. Brokers are commission-based salesmen – not advocates for your wealth.
      Either way, it’s the same game: The company gets cashed up and you own a chunk which you didn’t have to buy on the open market. But now the stock is diluted. So if investor A owned 11% of the company prior the financing, now – after the financing – he owns a smaller percentage.
      At my request, the hard-core market junkies in the back room of Equity Guru drilled down into this financing “The TSX.V and CSE rules allow for up to a 10% discount – to offset the risk of the 4-month hold. CYL closed at .19. CYL attached a .25 convertible debenture which pays 6%. If the company wanted to sweeten the investment, it could have been a .17 conversion. Insiders sometimes do this as a way of highlighting the company’s upside.” I hope this is a satisfactory “layman’s answer” to your question. It’s a good move for CYL.

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