In hindsight I could have waited for a better entry point and saved myself half a cent or so but I'm sure that you heard the saying “Nobody rings a bell at the top or the bottom of a market”
"No demand for Dy" is something that certain posters have been peddling for years in here probably because of sour grapes syndrome after doing their dough on NTU previously .
You have to wonder why would the Chinese put up money to build a mine and dig up something they won't need then pay for a product that there is no demand for to store away. Does that make any sense to you and if you wouldn't do it why would the Chinese do it ?
IMO it is more likely the Chinese are looking years and decades ahead and have began storing the minerals that will be required but end up in short supply once the large vehicle manufacturers from around the world move there to build EVs. Look at the news over the last few days , Tesla, VW & BMW are all looking at building plants in China not only for the local market but also for export.
As for the outlook ...
Dysprosium Outlook
InvestorIntel | June 01, 2017 |
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Ahead of
Northern Minerals Ltd. (ASX: NTU) (“Northern”) becoming Australia’s newest producer of rare earth elements, I thought I’d take a look at what the future holds for the element of primary economic value to the company, Dysprosium. Quite enough analysts have already called ‘bull’ on the flagship resource, and it’s about time to accept that its road to production is firmly cemented and peer down that path to see what we can reveal about its future.
Northern intend to stockpile extracted ore for three years during the initial phase of construction, but as the primary pilot plant stage is essentially a fully producing mine running at 10% output, material awaiting processing will be piling up from the very beginning. This is a sensible approach and allows the development of the project to incorporate effective troubleshooting along the way. Larger operations will almost always throw up significant technical gripes that, without the proper time to resolve, can derail many moons of hard labour. Crucially, this period will wait out the slump in rare earth prices that is expected to lift over the next few years, with many stating that the price of Dysprosium will double by 2020.
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Rare earths provide such excellent permanent magnets that very little work has been completed over the last few decades on developing a replacement, and while a small number of teams are currently working on alternatives, Dysprosium remains a fundamental ingredient in motors with enough torque to suit a range of industrial applications from wind turbines to electric vehicles. With demand for advanced motor systems increasing year-on-year, now seems a perfect time to catch what could be the final couple of decades of high Dysprosium demand. Interestingly, modern military technologies such as the predator drone and advanced jet systems all currently depend on these rare earth elements, adding serious credence to the claim of rising future value as we move ever-further into an increasingly dangerous world.
Most notably, Dysprosium is featured in control rods in the generation of nuclear power, and groups such as MIT have repeatedly called for an expansion of global nuclear energy output to provide the electricity necessary to fuel the world’s new technologies without negatively impacting the atmosphere with excessive carbon emissions. All in all, Dysprosium-dependent applications are undergoing significant expansion worldwide, and while China currently fills this massive void, the degradation of its rare earth containing clays from years of over-mining is starting to show. Moreover, a significant portion of this is thought to be occurring illegally due to the extremely dangerous nature of the cyanide-containing clays. Increased regulation throughout China, combined with the effects of years of illegal extraction, is impacting output in such a manner as to trigger the search for overseas supplies of heavy rare earths.
Perhaps this is exactly why Northern already have an offtake agreement in place with a major Chinese player, featuring a A$10m advance payment to help fund the construction of the processing plant and mine. China filled the supply gap left when Molycorp went under, but their collapse, coupled with increasing demand and the uncertainty of China’s future in the rare earth space, leaves plenty of room for Northern to become a serious player in an industry whose troubled times have killed-off uncountable explorers.
Brown’s Range is expected to produce the equivalent 148.2 tonnes of Dysprosium in the first three years of operation in a total of 1,719 tonnes of rare earth oxide. Groundwork is due to commence next month under the labouring hand of Maca, who were awarded the A$6m contract for mining this year. The pilot plant is already being constructed in China, and will be shipped to the site in around September to begin full operations. It’s safe to say that technology will never cease changing, and so we should expect that the distant future will hold a multitude of alternatives to the rare earth element applications of today, but for at least the next decade, Northern are looking more and more like a real rare earth success story!
https://investorintel.com/sectors/cleantech/cleantech-intel/northern-minerals-dysprosium-outlook/