At first I thought NovaRed was just another tiny BC copper explorer.

    Then I kept digging.

    The company now has multiple angles stacking together at the same time:

    • copper exposure

    • AI-assisted exploration

    • critical-minerals positioning

    • infrastructure-focused advisors

    • geopolitics around supply chains

    Wilmac itself is already fairly large for a junior:

    • around 16k hectares

    • roughly 160 sq km

    • near Copper Mountain in BC's Quesnel belt

    Recent exploration releases included:

    • North Lamont copper highs up to 379 ppm

    • historical Lamont values up to 1,125 ppm copper

    • interpreted intrusive centers from historical 3DIP/AMT work

    • pipe-like porphyry targets

    • additional geophysics planned into 2026

    Then the management/advisory side started getting interesting.

    Jacob Amsterdam was added around ESG and strategic-minerals positioning.

    Ed Kostenski brings:

    • 43 years in infrastructure and mining equipment

    • operations tied to 60+ countries

    • business across 75+ countries

    • Forbes-reported $1B+ historically raised for projects

    • White House recognition from President Bush in 2004

    • EXIM Africa advisory role in 2005

    That is a very unusual background mix for a company this small.

    And the timing lines up with the macro environment:

    • copper deficits returning

    • AI infrastructure demand rising

    • mine disruptions increasing

    • governments treating minerals as strategic assets

    • Western countries trying to reduce China dependence

    Still extremely speculative obviously.

    But from a pure narrative standpoint, this feels much more developed than the average early-stage junior mining story right now.

    NFA

    NovaRed Quietly Put Together One Of The More Interesting Small-Cap Copper Narratives I Have Seen Recently
    byu/adrgrou ininvesting



    Posted by adrgrou

    2 Comments

    1. PuffyPanda200 on

      This is the reason that I black list mining stocks. It seems that there is so much insider trading and risk.

      Then at the end you are basically betting that the miner makes most (or a large amount) of the profit while the secondary industry does not.

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