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5 Stocks on the Radar Amid China’s Graphite Export Ban

Recent developments from China’s Ministry of Commerce concerning export permits on critical graphite products have sent ripples through the financial markets. Graphite, indispensable for electric vehicle (EV) batteries, is now under tighter control by China, a country that dominates its global production.

Troy Grant of Elcora Advanced Materials Corp. (TSXV: ERA) highlights,

“Graphite content in an electric vehicle exceeds the demand for any other critical mineral fivefold. We’ve observed China make similar business maneuvers with rare earths, germanium, gallium, and now graphite. This trajectory was anticipated. While I concur with CMI’s Jack Lifton on lithium or cobalt possibly being next, we shouldn’t overlook vanadium.”

According to Critical Minerals Institute (CMI) Director Matt Bohlsen out of Australia early AM,

“The EV boom is creating a surge in demand for graphite… Each fully electric car battery has between 60-100kgs of graphite. China’s proposed ‘export permits’ will likely lead to a shortage of spherical and synthetic graphite outside of China, underscoring the world’s vulnerability to China’s supply disruption of critical minerals.”

Investors are now unquestionably watching stocks that might benefit the global market in light of the challenges presented by yet another China C Critical Mineral export ban. Here are five stocks that we were researching this morning (listed by market cap):

1: Syrah Resources Limited (ASX: SYR) – Market Cap: AUD$307.53M* — Syrah is an Australian Securities Exchange listed industrial minerals and technology company with its flagship Balama Graphite Operation in Mozambique and a downstream Active Anode Material Facility in the United States. Syrah’s vision is to be the world’s leading supplier of superior quality graphite and anode material products, working closely with customers and the supply chain to add value in battery and industrial markets.

2: Talga Group Ltd. (ASX: TLG) – Market Cap: AUD$353.53M* — Talga Group Ltd. is building a European battery materials supply chain to offer products critical to the green transition. Talga’s innovative technology and vertical integration of 100% owned Swedish graphite resources provides security of supply and creates additional value for stakeholders.

3: Zentek Ltd. (NASDAQ: ZTEK | TSXV: ZEN) – Market Cap: USD$128.24M*

Zentek is an ISO 13485:2016 certified intellectual property technology company focused on the research, development and commercialization of novel products seeking to give the Company’s commercial partners a competitive advantage by making their products better, safer, and greener.

Zentek’s patented technology platform ZenGUARD™, is shown to have 99-per-cent anti-microbial activity and to significantly increase the bacterial and viral filtration efficiency of both surgical masks and HVAC (heating, ventilation, and air conditioning) systems. Zentek’s ZenGUARD™ production facility is located in Guelph, Ontario.

Zentek has a global exclusive license to the Aptamer-based platform technology developed by McMaster University which is being jointly developed Zentek and McMaster for both the diagnostic and therapeutic markets.

Zentek is also the 100% owner of Albany Graphite Corp. (AGC).  AGC’s recently filed 43-101 Mineral Resource Estimate shows circa 1,000,000 tonnes of graphite in Ontario.  Importantly, that graphite is volcanic of origin, and globally unique. It is expected that graphite from AGC will perform better in EV batteries than other materials because of the volcanic origin.

4: Nouveau Monde Graphite Inc. (NYSE: NMG | TSXV: NOU) – Market Cap: USD$159.6M*

Nouveau Monde Graphite is striving to become a key contributor to the sustainable energy revolution. The Company is working towards developing a fully integrated source of carbon-neutral battery anode material in Québec, Canada, for the growing lithium-ion and fuel cell markets. With enviable ESG standards, NMG aspires to become a strategic supplier to the world’s leading battery and automobile manufacturers, providing high-performing and reliable advanced materials while promoting sustainability and supply chain traceability.

5: Northern Graphite Corporation (TSXV: NGC | OTCQB: NGPHF) – Market Cap: CAD$28.6M*

Northern is a Canadian, TSX Venture Exchange listed company that is focused on becoming a world leader in producing natural graphite and upgrading it into high value products critical to the green economy including anode material for Lithium-Ion batteries/EVs, fuel cells and graphene, as well as advanced industrial technologies.

Northern is the only graphite producing company in North America and will become the third largest producer outside of China when its Namibian operations come back online. The Company has the large scale Bissett Creek development project in Ontario that will be a source of continued production growth in the future.  All projects have “battery quality” graphite and are located close to infrastructure in politically stable jurisdictions.

(*) Market cap figures were sourced from the ASX, TSX, and Yahoo Finance Boards as of market opening on Friday, October 20, 2023. The listed market caps are in millions.

Amid these market shifts, it is pivotal for investors to stay updated and understand the dynamics affecting graphite and related stocks in the critical minerals sector. As China tightens its control over graphite exports, these companies and the wider EV sector will be in sharp focus, making it a space to watch closely in the coming months.




Who are the graphite mining leaders as analysts forecast a tight graphite market in 2023 and beyond

Reports continue to emerge that the graphite market may be next to boom. This is due to accelerating strong demand from the EV battery sector and limited new supply in the pipeline.

The 2021 International Energy Agency (“IEA”) report highlighted that the world will need between 8 and 25x more flake graphite from 2020 to 2040. This is supported by my recent Trend Investing forecast of a 17x increase in flake graphite demand from 2020 to 2037.

In December 2022 Fastmarkets stated: “An impending graphite shortage, driven by phenomenal demand growth from the EV battery sector and delays to new capacity…..will all lead to significantly higher graphite prices in the coming years.”

Trend Investing v IEA demand forecast for EV metals

Source: Trend Investing & IEA

The graphite mining leaders

There are a number of leading Chinese graphite mining companies (Aoyu Graphite Group, BTR New Energy Materials, Qingdao Black Dragon, National de Grafite, Shanshan Technology, and LuiMao Graphite); however, they are not typically accessible to most western investors.

Syrah Resources Limited (ASX: SYR | OTC: SYAAF) is the leading western graphite producer. They source their graphite from their 100% owned and massive Balama graphite mine in Mozambique. Syrah is currently constructing their active anode materials (“AAM”) plant at their Vidalia facility in Louisiana, USA. The facility has initial plans for 11.25ktpa of AAM and then to expand to 45ktpa AAM. The first stage 11.25ktpa AAM is targeted to start production in the September quarter of 2023. Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) signed an off-take agreement for an initial 8ktpa of AAM which was recently expanded to an additional 17ktpa AAM of off-take (see Dec. 23, 2022 news).

Other graphite producers include Ceylon Graphite Corp. (TSXV: CYL | OTCQB: CYLYF) with production in Sri Lanka, Mineral Commodities Ltd. (ASX: MRC) who own 90% of Skaland Graphite which operates the highest grade flake graphite operation in the world and largest producing mine in Europe, Tirupati Graphite PLC’s (LSE: TGR) project in Madagascar, and Northern Graphite Corporation (TSXV: NGC | OTCQB: NGPHF) with their Lac des Iles producing graphite mine in Quebec and the Okanjande graphite deposit/Okorusu processing plant in Namibia.

Some junior graphite miners

There are several junior graphite miners but those with the more advanced stage projects are NextSource Materials Inc. (TSX: NEXT | OTCQB: NSRCF), Talga Group Ltd. (ASX: TLG), Westwater Resources Inc. (NYSE: WWR), Nouveau Monde Graphite Inc. (NYSE: NMG |, TSXV: NOU), Triton Minerals Limited (ASX: TON), (TSXV: LEM | OTCQB: LEMIF), Lomiko Metals Inc. (TSXV: LMR | OTCQB: LMRMF), and Renascor Resources (ASX: RNU).

Closing remarks

The graphite miners have not yet taken off due to subdued graphite prices and ample supply in recent years; however, this looks set to start changing from 2023 onwards especially if the EV boom continues to do well. The flake graphite miners that can also move to make valued added active anode materials (spherical graphite) look set to capture even greater profits. There is also the synthetic graphite producers such as Novonix (ASX: NVX) (Nasdaq: NVX), the future graphite recycling companies such as Elcora Advanced Materials Corp. (TSXV: ERA | OTCQB: ECORF), and the graphene companies such as Zentek Ltd. (NASDAQ: ZTEK | TSXV: ZEN)….. but that’s for another discussion next time.




These are the graphite leaders as we head towards a forecast graphite deficit in 2023

The flake graphite sector does not get as much attention as lithium, yet the demand wave coming is also very significant. For example, in 2021 the International Energy Agency forecast that flake graphite demand could grow between 8x to 25x from 2020 to 2040. Benchmark Mineral Intelligence forecasts we need 97 new (56,000tpa) natural flake graphite mines from 2022 to 2035.

The calm before the storm

More recently in October 2022, Fastmarkets stated:

“Fastmarkets has forecast that demand for graphite from the battery sector in 2022 will rise by 40% year on year, in line with growth in the EV sector……We expect to see the graphite market tip back into deficit in late 2022…….Graphite prices are in a lull, but this lull will prove to be temporary and may well be the calm before the storm.”

Note: Bold emphasis by the author.

An 8 to 25x increase in demand, 97 new graphite mines, graphite deficit coming in late 2022! Yet no one is talking about graphite. Today we cover the main western graphite producers and touch on a few promising near term graphite producers, noting China currently dominates the graphite and anode sectors.

The western flake graphite leading producers

Syrah Resources Limited (ASX: SYR) – Syrah is an Australian company and one of the world’s largest flake graphite producers from their Balama graphite mine in Mozambique. Syrah is also working towards becoming a vertically integrated producer of Active Anode Materials (“AAM”) at their Vidalia facility, Louisiana, USA. In some exciting recent news for shareholders, Syrah was selected for a U.S Department of Energy grant of up to US$220 million towards their Vidalia facility expansion (initial production targeted to begin in Sept. quarter 2023). This comes on top of the news late in 2021 that Syrah signed a four year deal to supply graphite anode materials to Tesla. Syrah also recently signed an MOU with Ford and SK On as well as an MOU with LG Energy Solution. Clearly, Syrah Resources is in the box seat to become a critical supplier of both graphite and active anode materials this decade, especially for western OEMs.

The following companies are smaller scale western flake graphite producers:

  • Advanced Metallurgical Group NV (AMS: AMG | OTC: AMVMF) – Is a diversified producer of critical metals. They mostly produce lithium and vanadium, but also some high purity natural graphite production.
  • Ceylon Graphite Corp. (TSXV: CYL | OTCQB: CYLYF) – Produces graphite from their ‘vein graphite’ mine in Sri Lanka.
  • Mineral Commodities Ltd. (ASX: MRC) State they have the “world’s highest-grade operating flake graphite mine with mill feed grade averaging ∼25%C”. Also that they are “the biggest crystalline graphite producer in Europe and the fourth largest producer globally outside of China and accounts for around 2% of global annual natural flake graphite production” at their Skaland Graphite Operation in Norway. They also own the Munglinup Graphite Project in Western Australia and have received Critical Minerals Grant funding to build a pilot scale battery anode plant in Australia.
  • Northern Graphite (TSXV: NGC | OTCQB: NGPHF) – Recently completed the purchase from Imerys of the Lac des Iles producing graphite mine in Quebec and the Okanjande graphite deposit/Okorusu processing plant in Namibia. They also own the Bissett Creek graphite project located 100km east of North Bay, Ontario, Canada and the nearby Mousseau West Graphite Project.

Near term western potential flake graphite producers

  • NextSource Materials Inc. (TSX: NEXT | OTCQB: NSRCF) – Completion of construction activities and the start of mining activities is expected in November 2022, at their Molo Graphite Project in Madagascar. Phase 1 of the Molo Mine is designed to operate at a production capacity of 17,000 tonnes per annum.
  • Westwater Resources Inc. (NYSE: WWR) – Owns the Coosa Graphite Plant (2023 production start targeted) in USA. The Company plans to source natural graphite initially from non-China suppliers and then from the USA from 2028.
  • Nouveau Monde Graphite Inc. ( NYSE: NMG | TSXV: NOU ) (“NMG”) – Own the Matawinie graphite project, located in Quebec, Canada. In September this year it was announced that Tesla had recently visited their project in Quebec. Also recently the Company announced: “NMG, Panasonic Energy and Mitsui announce Offtake and Strategic Partnership supporting the supply of active anode material plus US$50 million private placement by Mitsui, Pallinghurst and Investissement Québec.”
  • Lomiko Metals Inc. (TSXV: LMR | OTCQB: LMRMF) – Earlier stage but 100% owns the promising La Loutre Graphite Project in Québec, Canada, where a PEA has been completed.

Closing remarks

An 8 to 25x increase in demand by 2040, 97 new graphite mines needed by 2035, graphite deficit coming in late 2022! Investors should not forget about graphite, and particularly focus on those graphite miners that are working towards being able to manufacture value-added active anode materials (spherical graphite), as that is where the real money is.

We may be experiencing ‘the calm before the storm’ (before graphite deficits push up prices), which means the sector still offers many great opportunities for investors.

Disclosure: The author is long Syrah Resources (ASX: SYR) and Advanced Metallurgical Group NV (AMS: AMG).