Highlights
- Royalty Management Holding Corp claims REE (rare earth elements) discovery in Jamaican mining lease.
- Lacks substantive technical evidence for the REE discovery claim.
- Confirmed presence of titanium, iron, and vanadium in the 213 million-ton deposit.
- Potential industrial mineral value in the deposit.
- Company’s strategy focuses on building market perception.
- Aims to leverage U.S. strategic interest in rare earth elements.
Proactive Investors (opens in a new tab) published a paid content release touting that Royalty Management Holding Corp (opens in a new tab) (NASDAQ: RMCO) has “uncovered” rare earth elements (REEs) in a Jamaican mining lease held by its portfolio company, TR Mining & Equipment. The piece, laced with optimistic quotes from CEO Thomas Sauve, frames the discovery as a game-changer—promising low-cost feedstock for magnetite, titanium, vanadium, and now REEs. But is this discovery grounded in technical rigor or marketing sheen?
American Resources Corporation is a 12% shareholder (opens in a new tab) in RMCO, according to Investing.com.
What’s Real: The Iron, Titanium & Vanadium Angle
It’s plausible that TR Mining’s Jamaican lease contains titanium, iron (as magnetite), and vanadium. These are not rare earth elements, but industrial minerals with established use cases and extractive paths. Prior technical reports have already affirmed their presence in the 213 million-ton deposit. The company’s goal of local processing and employment also aligns with ESG-forward junior mining narratives—a commendable if still aspirational plan.
Enter the RareEarths: Promising or Premature?
The real pivot—and the marketing hook—is the expanded “sampling program” allegedly revealing “meaningfully high concentrations” of REEs. No assay data, concentration grades, or even which rare earths were identified are disclosed. Without that, this remains speculative. In REE exploration, context is everything: Which elements? How much? In what mineral host? Can it be economically separated?
Until those questions are answered with a NI 43-101–style technical report, the REE claim should be treated as an investor teaser—not a validated resource.
Royalty Play or Paper Value?
Royalty Management’s 10% royalty stake on any mineral sales from the project could become valuable—if extraction becomes commercially viable. But that’s a long road. The company’s current monetization strategy appears to rely on perception: build market enthusiasm, enhance asset narrative, and ride the tailwinds of U.S. strategic interest in REEs. There’s no indication yet of downstream partners, refining plans, or offtake interest—elements essential to translating rocks into revenue.
This may be a promising story-in-the-making—but for now, it’s just that: a story. Investors should hold off the “next Lynas” headlines until the assays speak louder than the marketing.
© Rare Earth Exchanges™ 2025
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