On Behalf of Alaska Energy Metals Corporation
Most investors measure opportunity in gold.
Ounces. Grades. In-situ value.
It is the universal language of resource investing.
So here is a comparison worth your attention.
There is a deposit in Alaska that, when you convert its metals to gold equivalent at today's prices, works out to roughly 72 million ounces.
At about 0.70 grams per tonne.
For context, deposits half that size have created billion-dollar companies.
The difference is this one is not a gold mine.
It is a polymetallic system containing nickel, copper, cobalt, chromium, platinum, palladium, and gold, seven minerals the U.S. government has officially designated as critical for national security.
At current metal prices, the in-situ value runs about $110 per tonne.
The company controlling it has a market cap that barely registers against that math.
Alaska Energy Metals (OTCQB: AKEMF) owns what has been documented as the largest nickel deposit in the United States. Verified. NI 43-101 compliant. Located near roads, rail, power, and a deep-water port in mining-friendly Alaska.
This is not a promotional story. It is an arithmetic story.
The resource exists. The value exists. The market has not caught up.
With metallurgical results due this year, a preliminary economic assessment to follow, and a $56 million government grant application under review, the catalysts are lining up.
These are the moments experienced resource investors recognize.
Before the valuation adjusts. Before the market does the math.