Cornish Metals (LON:CUSN) Trading Down 3.5% – Should You Sell?

Cornish Metals Inc. (LON:CUSNGet Free Report)’s share price dropped 3.5% during trading on Thursday . The company traded as low as GBX 8.40 ($0.10) and last traded at GBX 8.67 ($0.11). Approximately 490,437 shares traded hands during mid-day trading, an increase of 20% from the average daily volume of 407,071 shares. The stock had previously closed at GBX 8.98 ($0.11).

Cornish Metals Stock Down 1.7 %

The firm’s 50 day simple moving average is GBX 8.71 and its two-hundred day simple moving average is GBX 7.53. The stock has a market cap of £45.50 million, a P/E ratio of 1,150.00 and a beta of 2.48.

About Cornish Metals

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Cornish Metals is a dual-listed mineral exploration and development company (AIM and TSX-V: CUSN) focused on advancing the 100% owned and fully permitted South Crofty high-grade, underground tin project towards production in 2027, as well as exploring its additional mineral rights, located in Cornwall, United Kingdom.
• South Crofty is a historical, high-grade, underground tin mine that started production in 1592 and continued operating until 1998 following over 400 years of continuous production;
• The Project possesses Planning Permission for underground mining (valid to 2071), to construct new processing facilities and all necessary site infrastructure, and an Environmental Permit to dewater the mine;
• South Crofty is one of the highest grade tin Mineral Resources globally and benefits from existing mine infrastructure including multiple shafts that can be used for future operations;
• The 2024 Preliminary Economic Assessment for South Crofty validates the Project’s potential (see news release dated April 30, 2024 and the Technical Report entitled “South Crofty PEA” dated April 8, 2024):
o US$201 million after-tax NPV8% and 29.8% IRR
o 3-year after-tax payback
o 4,700 tonnes average annual tin production in years two through six
o Life of mine all-in sustaining cost of US$13,660 /tonne of payable tin
o Total after-tax cash flow of US$626 million from start of production
• Tin is a Critical Mineral as defined by the UK, American, and Canadian governments;
• Approximately two-thirds of the tin mined today comes from China, Myanmar and Indonesia;
• There is no primary tin production in Europe or North America;
• Tin connects almost all electronic and electrical infrastructure, making it critical to the energy transition – responsible sourcing of critical minerals and security of supply are key factors in the energy transition and technology growth;
• South Crofty benefits from strong local community, regional and national government support.

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