Friday May 18

November 13, 2011 - FDNN - Comments on Tasman Metals and the Comeback of Rare Earth Companies by John Kaiser

November 14, 2011

TASMAN METALS LTD.

TSXv - TSM; Frankfurt - T61 (WKN A0Y GN1); Pinksheets – TASXF

The Tasman Metals Rare Earth Story’

THE GOLD REPORT - “Rare Earth Companies Poised for Comeback”

John Kaiser comments on Tasman Metals


Dear Friends:

In a recent interview with Streetwise Reports (www.theaureport.com), John Kaiser, editor of Kaiser Research Online (www.kaiserbottomfish.com), commented on Tasman Metals Ltd. and the comeback of Rare Earth Companies.

The companies in a race to produce critical heavy rare earth elements by 2016 are already way ahead of their smaller competitors and in this exclusive interview with ‘The Critical Metals Report’, John handicaps the players on the end-user, producer and investor side.

Believe it or not, China may have the largest stake in developing sources outside its borders.

John Kaiser, a mining analyst with over 25 years' experience, is editor of Kaiser Research Online. He specializes in high-risk speculative Canadian securities and the resource sector is the primary focus for an investment approach he developed that combines his "bottom-fishing strategy" with his "rational speculation model." Since 2008 he has developed a focus on security of supply issues and how they relate to critical metals such as rare earths.

We thought you'd be interested in reading John Kaiser's comments on Tasman Metals Ltd. especially since the Company is working towards a potential production date in 2015/2016.

Scroll Down to see these comments.

 Regards from Vancouver,

Nick L. Nicolaas

Mining Interactive "Ahead of the Pack"


John Kaiser's Comments:


"Tasman's advantage is a very large deposit in Sweden called Nora Karr. This deposit will have something like 70-80 Mt. and could conceivably take care of Europe's needs for 50+ years.  Sweden is a stable country with local infrastructure in place. The problem is the Nora Karr involves a mineral that has never been commercially exploited. So a key milestone is the publication of a preliminary economic assessment based on a bench scale-established metallurgical flow sheet that establishes the recoveries and the associated energy and reagent costs. . . So deposits such as Tasman's Nora Karr and Quest's Strange Lake are of interest to Western and Chinese end users. . . The world does not need dozens and dozens of these deposits, however, which is why I think the race has already pretty much been wrapped up by companies such as. . .Tasman."

 

Tasman “a Heavy Rare Earth Mine in the making”!

Stay Tuned - - for the next Chapter in the Tasman Metals Rare Earth Story!!!

 


media