Fair enoughHi smarty papst, did it occur to you that I posted at about 11 pm 1/1/24 when I said 365 days to go?
Better stop playing with your cock, before it falls off.![]()
Fair enoughHi smarty papst, did it occur to you that I posted at about 11 pm 1/1/24 when I said 365 days to go?
Better stop playing with your cock, before it falls off.![]()
I wonder how you went with your endeavours of becoming part of Jags inner circle.Fair enoughwhen I replyed to your post, I just woke up after a new years eve party in Germany, so my day just startet. Anyhow, at least one day more to sort this shitshow out and bring us some easter eggs, eventually.
I love this, imagine sunning it up while your country is considered one of the worst on the planet, your people starve and die, and your ministers openly corrupt any opportunity you once had to change it. â 2 pina colladas pleaseâ âwould you like strategic mineral management and sovereign wealth with thatâ. âNo thanks and keep the fruitâI guess we're not expecting any government directives out of Felix for the next few weeks whilst he gets his balls licked in St Tropez to celebrate.
Hoping to here an ICSID determination when they re-open for the year tomorrow which will turn the heat up and stagnate the development of Manono.
Still feels useless though as Cominiere don't have that cash according to the IGF report and Z would happily keep paying it if it keeps them on the scene.I have calculated that Cominiere now owe avz ~$14.45M Euros (240 x 50K + 45 x 50K) - useless information probably but the fees keep piling up.
Fucking hoping something can break this loggerhead soon
Leave him be - he's working on his tanI love this, imagine sunning it up while your country is considered one of the worst on the planet, your people starve and die, and your ministers openly corrupt any opportunity you once had to change it. â 2 pina colladas pleaseâ âwould you like strategic mineral management and sovereign wealth with thatâ. âNo thanks and keep the fruitâ
Yes, I like piña coladasI love this, imagine sunning it up while your country is considered one of the worst on the planet, your people starve and die, and your ministers openly corrupt any opportunity you once had to change it. â 2 pina colladas pleaseâ âwould you like strategic mineral management and sovereign wealth with thatâ. âNo thanks and keep the fruitâ
I have calculated that Cominiere now owe avz ~$14.45M Euros (240 x 50K + 45 x 50K) - useless information probably but the fees keep piling up.
Fucking hoping something can break this loggerhead soon
HNY buddy, cruise was good. Parts of NZ are awesome. Now back to reality and the soap opera that is "The Days of Our Manono"Looks like a little âblowing off steam âDoc âŠWe dont call him BAGS for nothinghow was the cruise
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Hi Doc,HNY buddy, cruise was good. Parts of NZ are awesome. Now back to reality and the soap opera that is "The Days of Our Manono"
Lets hope for a better year for us all
No got back 23rd DecHi Doc,
Were you on the cruise to NZ for 10 days and returned yesterday to Port?
SilentOne
Be nice to have a good one on the list. My stock picks have been terrible
Theres an alternative side DocI hope @9cardomaha is just on holidays and hasnt been sought out by our adversaries. Hate to think after all the good reporting last year he hanging somewhere attached to a car battery
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Reason No.2...This is why China wants to get its grubby hands on Manono amongst other things...
Analysis
Chinaâs BYD has more than Tesla in its sights
David Fickling
It may be just one-tenth the size of Tesla in terms of market capitalisation, but BYD has just pulled ahead to become the worldâs biggest producer of battery passenger cars. For its next trick, itâs going to take on the world.
To many, BYD remains a little-known car brand, more familiar from business-news articles citing Warren Buffettâs 2008 investment in the Chinese EV maker than sightings of actual vehicles out on the road.
Yet the vast volume of its sales in China, combined with a growing number overseas, means it overtook its American rival in the December quarter. The 526,409 vehicles delivered over the period pipped Teslaâs 484,507. This milestone if anything underplays BYDâs growing might.
Throw in trucks, buses and plug-in hybrids, and BYDâs sales total is 75 per cent higher than the number for pure battery cars, at 918,807. More importantly, on almost every financial metric, the Chinese company is either advancing on, or overtaking, its American rival â with its gaze already set on the wider car industry.
While many competitors have struggled amid the wave of discounting thatâs hit the EV sector over the past year, BYD has prospered. In contrast to Tesla, which racked up years of losses before turning profitable in 2019, it has hardly ever posted negative operating income â and in the September quarter came within a whisker of the reinvigorated US companyâs $US1.76 billion ($2.6 billion) result. By owning its own battery supply chain and focusing on cheaper, less zippy cells that use abundant iron and phosphate instead of scarce cobalt and nickel, itâs managed to lift margins even as materials costs rose.
That translates into industry-beating financial performance. Most Chinese car companies post uninspiring single-digit returns on equity, giving shareholders little reason to prefer their stock to investment-grade corporate bonds that yield 5.8 per cent. BYD, on the other hand, is spitting out profits that have led to the best returns on equity among major carmakers.
Returns on invested capital, a metric that encompasses how successful the company is at generating profits from its asset base, are also the best among volume car makers worldwide, and have risen consistently for the past 18 months to overtake Tesla.
You might expect this performance would induce the sort of shareholder euphoria that has caused Elon Muskâs company to be valued at a 64-times forward price-earnings ratio. Far from it: while BYDâs 13.5 ratio is a premium to the 7.95-times P/E ratio on the Hang Seng Index, itâs priced at a discount to Indiaâs Tata Motors and the 19.7-times multiple of the S&P 500, and not far above mainstream carmakers such as Toyota and Ford.
After a $US12 billion selloff during November, BYD is as cheap as it has been going back to the start of 2010, despite 31 out of 32 analysts putting a Buy rating on the stock.
The most substantive argument against BYD right now is that it has grown too far, too fast.
Despite overtaking Honda, Toyota and Volkswagen to snatch the crown as Chinaâs best-selling car marque over the past few years, its vehicles arenât exactly rushing off dealership lots: there were 1.91 cars sitting in inventory for every one sold in November, a number thatâs grown from 1.04 a year earlier even as prices have fallen about 6.2 per cent.
This is high even by the standards of a Chinese industry thatâs plagued with oversupply, and suggests flagging consumer appetite for vehicles that most reviewers seem to find more stolid than compelling.
Thatâs a small negative when placed against the wealth of positive metrics BYD can now boast â and if you think boring cars donât have a future, itâs worth remembering that the bestselling four-wheeler in history is the Toyota Corolla, or that this entire industry was kicked off by a vehicle that, famously, was usually only available in black.
BYD is already setting its horizons well beyond China, with one in 10 of its cars sold overseas during December, compared to one in 40 in July 2022. The EV maker announced a new assembly factory last month in Hungary, and others are reportedly under consideration in Mexico. Such investments would mirror Japanese and South Korean car makers, who got around protectionist tariffs since the 1980s by building production lines in key destination markets.
If its current trajectory is anything to go by, BYDâs relatively little-known status outside China is about to change drastically. In years to come, weâll look back on 2024 as the year it joined the ranks of Tesla, Hyundai, Toyota, Volkswagen and Ford as formerly obscure car brands that went on to bestride the world.
BLOOMBERG
I'm sticking to my view that the lepidolite deposits and stockpiles get exhausted soon and that the processing of lepidolite is a short term attempt by China to squash the market.Reason No.2...
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Dwayne Sparkes
@sparkes_dwayne
No coffee today as I spat it out reading Goldman Sachs' lithium supply table which popped up in my twitter feed. What i find most intriguing about this table is that it states the majority of lithium supply will come from China itself, in particular internal lepidolite and brine. In my opinion, this is unrealistic and the numbers don't quite seem logical. Lets break down the lepidolite numbers: They are predicting that 462,000t of LCE will be produced internally from Chinese lepidolite in the year 2030. Using a previous post of mine (i'll put the link in the comments below), for a lepidolite ore of grade 0.55%, you need approximately 14 tonnes of lepidolite to get SC6 equivalent. Roughly 6 tonnes of SC6 is needed for 1 tonne of LCE. You need around about 14 * 6 = 84 tonnes of lepidolite ore grading 0.55% to get 1 tonne of LCE...84 * 462,000t LCE = 38,808,000 tonnes of ore grading 0.55% to meet 2030 yearly output prediction alone. That's 6 years away... The largest documented lepidolite mine within China is the "414 Mine". Approximately has 130Mt @ 0.38% li2O. That's roughly equivalent to a #GL1 Manna deposit in terms of contained lithium. Plug the above 0.38% into the previous calc and you're almost processing half of China's biggest documented lepidolite deposit yearly... Defies logic for me. Also, the above is just talking about pure tonnage. The waste products (which i've touched on in previous posts) from the deleterious elements (iron, fluorine, potassium, etc.) within lepidolite will be astronomical. There are already reports of converters sending ore back and tailing storages blowing out in size. How is it going to look when you are processing 38Mt+ of low grade lepidolite ore a year? Lepidolite contains more deleterious elements than spodumene, is generally lower grade, is slower and more difficult to process, especially in the leaching stage. I'm sticking to my view that the lepidolite deposits and stockpiles get exhausted soon and that the processing of lepidolite is a short term attempt by China to squash the market. IMO there is no chance lepidolite will ever be cheaper than spodumene to process and it isn't a realistic solution to meet future lithium demand. Cheers for reading.![]()