China Is Weaponizing This Metal Crucial To The U.S. Military

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China's dominance in Rare Earth metals is hard to ignore, But for one lesser-known metal that fuels the U.S. defense sector, China's grip is so tight that the U.S. now finds itself desperately scrambling to discover and develop friendly new resources before supply is squeezed to nothing.

This rare metal saved the Allies in WWII, and it has very suddenly reclaimed its critical status on three continents, leading to a recent 200%+ surge in spot prices.

Meet antimony, the most important metal you’ve never heard of.

During WWII, antimony was vital for producing ammunition, tungsten steel, and hardening lead bullets.

The U.S. supplied 90% of its own needs back then. Not anymore.

America’s enemies control almost all the world’s antimony reserves.

And now they are weaponizing it.

And despite predictions of wild price increases of over 300% by January 2025, there’s light at the end of the tunnel for the U.S. and its allies, as a group of miners step in to boost supply in Australia, the European Union and North America.

Source: CoinCodex

“This is it. The world is already at war, and China has cut off North America’s main antimony supply,” says Military Metals Corp. CEO Scott Eldridge, a 17-year veteran of the Canadian mining sector.

Military Metals Corp. (CSE:MILI; OTCQB:MILIF) has been busy scooping up antimony assets this year and is planning to help North America get back into the antimony game quickly by utilizing past producing mines in North America and Europe with large historical resources.

At the moment, China accounts for around half of all global antimony production, and as of the end of last year, it supplied 60% of U.S. antimony imports.

As for the mines falling outside China’s control, many of them send their antimony to China for processing–meaning China’s hands are on most of the world’s antimony supply.

Source: Mining.com

But two historical antimony projects recently acquired by Canada-based Military Metals Corp. (CSE:MILI; OTCQB:MILIF) could put the United States on more solid critical metals footing.

Right as demand is soaring at an all-time high.

The U.S. Army, for one, is on an artillery shell production binge, seeking to ramp up output from 4,000 units/month to 100,000 units/month by the end of the year. They’re preparing for war.

And it all requires antimony, and China is blocking supply with export restrictions implemented in September this year.

The antimony supply squeeze is in full force.

And a ~200% surge in antimony prices “has been almost entirely supply driven”, says CRU analyst Chetan Soni. "The surge has been almost entirely supply driven. It is not clear when the supply constraints will improve," Soni told Reuters in May of this year.