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Kazakh vanadium miner is first 2019 London listing in sector

28th March 2019

By: Reuters

  

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LONDON – Ferro-Alloy Resources Group, which is producing vanadium in Kazakhstan, lists on the London stock market on Thursday, marking the first junior flotation in the sector this year.

Vanadium has traditionally been used for strengthening steel, but its price has risen 450% in three years on expectations it can also be used for large-scale power storage, which could have a major role in a more electrified economy.

As part of its admission to the London market, the company, which is also listed in Kazakhstan, has raised 5.2-million pounds and issued 7 507 761 new ordinary shares at a placing price of 70p each. That implies a market capitalisation of 219.1-million pounds.

Trading in London begins at 08:00 GMT.

CEO Nick Bridgen says the company's mine, which is already producing, has the lowest cash cost in the world because the nature of the deposit allows cheap processing.

"This unique project has the potential to be one of the world's largest and lowest cost producing mines," he said.

The money raised ahead of the flotation will help to take a first phase of the Balasausqandiq vanadium project to output of more than 5 600 t of vanadium pentoxide and expand production at a separate part of the project that is already operating to 1 500 t/y.

The aim in about three-and-a-half years is to produce around 23 000 t/y of vanadium pentoxide.

The project has a net present value of $2-billion, assuming a long-term vanadium pentoxide price of $7.50/lb. The current price is around $14/lb, compared with a peak of $35 in 2005 and a low in 2015 of $2.38/lb.

Ferro-Alloy stands out in a sector that has been struggling to raise cash because of concerns about risk that were heightened by a Vale dam disaster in Brazil in January that killed an estimated 300 people.

As investors increasingly focus on sustainability, including the avoidance of any dangerous accumulations of waste, Bridgen said Ferro-Alloy was aiming for zero waste, with byproducts sold to China and Kazakhstan and other material being made into bricks for building.

New listings in London have more broadly been held back by uncertainty linked to Britain's decision to leave the European Union.

Kazakhstan is also grappling with change after President Nursultan Nazarbayev unexpectedly resigned after three decades in power. Bridgen said he believed the transition would be managed and not disrupt business.

Edited by Reuters

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