Editor’s Note: During the week, Bill connects the dots on Wall Street and in Washington. But today, we hand the reins to our guest editor, David Forest, Casey Research’s globetrotting geologist. Below, Dave connects a few dots of his own in the world of resource investing.

Tech giants, including trillion-dollar Apple, have quietly been gaining exposure to a handful of mining operations. Dave thinks he knows why… and reveals how investors can capitalize.


“Mining? You mean, like, digging stuff out of the ground? That’s so cool!” said the young fellow in the sports jacket and track pants.

That’s not usually the kind of reaction I get when I tell people I’m in the mining business. But then again, I’m usually talking to people who know the mining business.

The young fellow in front of me was not one of those people.

He was a tech investor – a member of the Silicon Valley inner circle that populates the San Francisco Bay Area, where I’d stopped on my way down to South America to look at copper projects.

But he was very interested in mining – pressing me with questions about finding and producing metals like nickel and lithium.

Old World Business

After talking a while, I realized he knew quite a bit about these metals. In fact, he told me he’d been following these markets closely ever since he heard Tesla’s CEO, Elon Musk, talk about them as part of the company’s earnings conference call.

This wasn’t just academic curiosity. He wanted to know how he could get investment exposure to metals that firms like Tesla use in the batteries for their electric vehicles (EVs).

Seeing tech professionals like this interested in an “old world” business like mining is notable.

Up until recently, metals might as well have appeared from a Stargate or been created by nanobots in a laboratory for all the average Silicon Valley professional knew or cared.

But the EV revolution is shifting the tech sector’s attention to mining in a very big way…

You see, EV batteries require a lot of specialty metals like lithium, nickel, and manganese… and these metals aren’t easy to find.

Only four countries on Earth produce lithium in significant quantities: Australia, Chile, Argentina, and China. Manganese also has a skinny list of sources, which includes murkier locales like Gabon and South Africa.

So what happens when limited supply meets wildly rising demand for metals from the EV battery space? After all, the EV battery industry is projected to grow by 32% yearly for at least the next decade.

Turns out, faced with metals shortages, tech companies started taking matters into their own hands.

Straight to the Source

April 2018 saw the beginning of an abrupt pivot in sourcing strategy for tech firms. That’s when Japanese tech giant SoftBank Group – which manages a $100 billion technology fund – announced it was buying directly into mining.

SoftBank got into the game by investing $99 million into mining firm Nemaska Lithium, taking up to 9.9% control of the company. (To be clear, I don’t recommend buying Nemaska Lithium today… But Softbank’s investment in Nemaska Lithium shows just how big the battery metals trend is becoming.)

More important than corporate ownership, SoftBank also has the right to buy 20% of the lithium supply coming out of Nemaska’s mine each year.

End users are going straight to the source…

And it’s not just SoftBank… In June, Bloomberg reported that Apple was in talks to buy battery metals directly from miners. This shows that even industry giants are worried about access to scarce battery components.

Geopolitical intelligence platform Stratfor summed up tech’s new love affair with mining in a July article, saying that “makers and users of the world’s batteries are scrambling to secure the vital raw materials needed to produce the lithium-ion cells that will power electric vehicles around the globe.”

That’s a huge development for the mining business…

A tech group like SoftBank single-handedly has access to capital equal to the amount that flowed into the entire global mining industry in 2017.

Add in Apple, Tesla, Panasonic, and other battery makers and users, and the amount of capital hunting for mining investments becomes absolutely staggering.

Right Place

Not only do tech firms need metals – they need them from the right places on the planet… which means countries that are legally and ethically acceptable, especially to politically correct peers in Silicon Valley.

So a lot of attention is coming to battery metals mines and projects in places that are less dangerous, including the U.S., Canada, Australia, and Finland. Watch for more tech-backed deals coming down the pipe as Silicon Valley unfolds its plan to revolutionize mining.

I believe tech investors like SoftBank and others are going to focus on battery metals mining companies which are in the process of building new mines.

For a simple way to capitalize on this major trend, you can invest in the Global X Lithium & Battery Tech Fund (LIT). It invests in a broad basket of companies involved in lithium mining, lithium refining, and battery production.

Regards,

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David Forest
Editor, International Speculator

P.S. My team and I just released a brand-new video that explains another huge investment trend – one you’re probably not hearing about today.

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