Industrial metals are on the rise
Drivers for a new supercycle in certain metals should be efforts to combat climate change
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Supply is not prepared for the huge wave of demand that is rolling in. In the first months of 2022, many industrial metals have made significant gains. In the current weak phase, this should be used as an entry point. Because even if some metals take a breather, the big picture as a whole remains. Decarbonization and electrification will consume a lot of raw materials. It should not be forgotten that with the extreme rise in energy costs, the prices of metals are also benefiting. This is because energy costs account for a significant portion of metals in processing and refining. Periods of weakness in industrial metals came after China went into lockdown again and recession fears spread. Poor economic prospects may continue to depress metal prices for some time.
The increasing demand caused by climate change will lead to deficits in some metals due to supply that will not be able to keep up. Some people interested in raw materials may immediately think of lithium. After all, for use in green technologies, lithium plays a central role alongside copper, nickel or aluminum. It is used in energy storage and utilization as well as in wind and solar energy and in electric vehicles. The new growth in demand for lithium, for example, requires the development and production of new lithium deposits. Whereas in the past it was industrialization that triggered a supercycle in industrial metals, today it is climate change. Investing in companies with lithium projects couldn't hurt. There's Cypress Development - https://youtu.be/q8W0NOxkTPQ - with its 100 percent owned Clayton Valley lithium project in Nevada. In Mongolia, ION Energy - https://youtu.be/aF5edgYRlXE - is working on its two lithium projects. Mongolia is mining-friendly.
Current corporate information and press releases from Cypress Development (https://www.resource-capital.ch/de/unternehmen/cypress-development-corp/ ).
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