Shareholders in sometimes troubled graphite player Talga Group (ASX:TLG) have rewarded the company’s acumen to move into the U.S. battery anode market at a time when American exceptionalism really is grasping the materials sector Down Under.
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It’s also a good time to be a company getting into metals recycling, which has come to the fore most prominently since Trump 2.0 ratcheted up by tenfold what had been an increasingly tense geopolitical relationship with China when it comes to global market share of supply chains broadly.
The same is true in Australia, where the relationship is perhaps most markedly strange, given we keep flying representatives over there.
At any rate, before all of this, the world of metals recycling, circular economy, that felt a bit ESG. But once trade war (and literal war) came together, with the assistance of an often-heavy focus on defence manufacturing, critical metals recycling is now viable and hot. Just look at Metallium, formerly MTM Critical Metals – or the other small myriad of ASX juniors suddenly operating in the space.
At any rate, while it has effectively signed an MOU called something else (non-binding), Talga’s new deal with U.S.-based metals recycling outfit United Catalyst Corporation reflects its first step into the U.S., as far as the company is concerned.
And with shares reaching 50cps, some +7% intraday, it shows the market’s listening.
“This agreement with UCC marks a turning point as we expand our innovative, low-emission battery solutions to the dynamic US market, accelerating Talga’s commercialisation of its … product and boosting access to new customers and funding opportunities,” Talga chief Martin Phillips said.
“We look forward to collaborating with UCC to become leaders in sustainable U.S.-sourced battery anode materials amid major shifts in global supply chain security.”
There are those three seemingly magic words: “Supply chain security.”
TLG last traded at 50cps.
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