Brazil Beckons: Origen Bets Early on a Basin-Scale Rare Earth Story

Dec 18, 2025

Highlights

  • Origen Resources (OTC: OGGNF) is acquiring two REE exploration licenses in northeastern Brazil.
  • Total area of the licenses is 3,978 hectares.
  • Transaction details include:
    • US$50,000 cash
    • 2 million shares
    • US$1 million exploration commitment
  • This marks Origen Resources' first entry into Brazil's emerging rare earth landscape.
  • Initial field due diligence identified REE-bearing minerals in sandstone and phosphate nodule outcrops.
  • No laboratory assays, grades, or NI 43-101 resources have been disclosed, emphasizing prospectivity over proven discovery.
  • Agreement entails low upfront costs but includes future dilution.
  • Vendor will receive 15% ownership and a board seat after two years.
  • Creates governance complexity for the micro-cap company with approximately US$2 million market cap.

Origen Resources (opens in a new tab) (OTC: OGGNF, CSE: ORGN) has elected to proceed with the acquisition of two rare earth element (REE) exploration licenses totaling 3,978 hectares in Piauรญ State, northeastern Brazil, following completion of initial field due diligence. The decision, announced via Newsfile on December 18, marks Origenโ€™s first material step into Brazilโ€™s emerging REE landscapeโ€”still lightly explored, but increasingly watched by global supply-chain strategists.

Signals in the Field, Not a Discoveryโ€”Yet

Origenโ€™s field teams collected soil and rock samples, conducted handheld XRF screening, and commissioned SEM work that identified an REE-bearing mineral hosted in sandstone and siltstone. Mapping also revealed phosphate nodule outcrops, radiometric anomalies, and shallow-dipping stratigraphyโ€”features that can support basin-scale target generation, rather than isolated showings.

These findings are directionally encouraging and accurately reported. However, investors should note the clear boundary between prospectivity and proof. No laboratory assay results have yet been released, no grades disclosed, and no NI 43-101 resource has been defined. The company appropriately frames the work as due diligence, not discoveryโ€”a restraint worth noting in a sector often prone to premature hype.

The Deal Structure: Cheap Entry, Real Obligations

Origen will acquire a 90% interest for US$50,000 in cash, 2 million shares, and a US$1 million exploration commitment over two years. After that period, the vendor will receive additional shares to reach 15% ownership and gain a board seat. The structure offers low upfront cost but embeds future dilution and governance complexity, particularly for a micro-cap company with a market capitalization near US$2 million at recent trading levels.

A right of first refusal on an additional ~9,900 hectares could become valuableโ€”but only if early exploration results justify expansion.

Why This Matters in the REE Supply Chain

Brazil remains underexplored for rare earths relative to Africa or Australia, yet offers jurisdictional scale, infrastructure upside, and geopolitical neutrality attractive to Western supply chains seeking diversification away from China. Origenโ€™s move underscores a familiar truth in critical minerals: early-stage optionality is inexpensive; validation is not.

REEx Take

This announcement is accurate, measured, and procedurally sound. Enthusiasm around โ€œfirst-mover advantageโ€ is understandable but remains speculative without assays. For investors, this is a conceptual foothold, not yet an asset. The next data releaseโ€”laboratory resultsโ€”will matter far more than todayโ€™s narrative.

Source: Origen Resources Inc., Newsfile Corp., December 18, 2025.

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By Daniel

Inspired to launch Rare Earth Exchanges in part due to his lifelong passion for geology and mineralogy, and patriotism, to ensure America and free market economies develop their own rare earth and critical mineral supply chains.

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