>What is it? Pulsar helium is an emerging helium exploratory and development company. It offers a pure play on helium by focusing on helium extraction as a primary product, rather than a by product of natural gas extraction. It currently has two emerging projectshttps://pulsarhelium.com/projects/topaz/default.aspxThe first is it's Topaz project in Minnesota. Seven wells were recently drilled, and all seven reported significant helium concentrations. Jetstream 1 averaged 8.1% helium (with concentrations in some wells reaching 14%) and Jetstream 2 averaged 5.6%It should be noted economically viable helium reservoirs only need to have a concentration of 0.3%. This makes the Topaz region the 2nd largest helium reserve in North America. The wells also contain an average of 71% CO2, giving the project the capability of producing both critical gasses currently facing shortages. Bipartisan support in Minnesota surrounding helium development will ensure the speedy development of this stake. The 2nd is it's Tunu Project in greenland.https://pulsarhelium.com/projects/tunu/default.aspxWhile not as large as it's project in the Topaz region, the project boasts a well concentration of 0.8%, making it one of the largest primary reserves of Helium in all of Europe. In both provinces Pulsar Helium holds First Mover status and EXCLUSIVE mineral exploration licenses. This makes Pulsar Helium the most lucrative pure play on helium 99% of you are missing. >what's the chart likePulsar Helium (Ticker PLSR) is currently trading at $1.31/ shareIt has a 52 week low of 0.29And a high of 1.93. Last week saw it reach it's ATH, with its CEO taking advantage of and selling ~500k worth of shares.There are currently 162 million shares, giving the company a Market Cap of 207m Once development begins, Pulsar will grow into one of the largest helium producers in North America. https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=EHGkYuAePJw
>>62075780ty fren
>>62075780interesting. need to replace that precious Qatari He+ from somewhere
>>62075804Yes, they produced around 1/3 of the world's helium, recent strikes by Iran have destroyed reportedly over 25% of their production capabilities for the foreseeable future. This has reduced the global helium output by 6.66%. Further blockades of the hormussy will lead to increased shortages, making a domestic supply of helium an issue of national security.
>>62075817whats helium do anyway?
>>62075823Helium is an inert, non renewable gas critical to many industries.Healthcare accounts for 40% of the world's usage, primarily in cooling the superconducting magnets in MRI machinesWelders use it as a shielding gasCritical to semiconductor production Can't make fiber optic cable without itNASA uses it for rocket shit The airbag in your car likely uses itCryogenics? Yeah that needs helium too
>>62075856i wanted air ships so bad
>>62075823>>62075856and lab equipment for all kinds of analyses. Mining and resource exploration industries will come to a screaming halt without lab results.
If the CEO was so confident in his company, he should be buying shares not selling them into the price spike for exit liquidity. If anything they should have used ATM dilution during the spike to increase funding for all the shit they need to process the helium
>>62075899My mistake, it wasn't the CEO>Pulsar Helium Inc. has disclosed that ABCrescent Cooperatief U.A., an entity associated with former director Brice Laurent, has sold 280,000 common shares of the company. Following this transaction, ABCrescent controls or directs 19,789,167 Pulsar shares, representing 10.68% of the company’s issued and outstanding share capital.For further reading see https://www.tipranks.com/news/company-announcements/pulsar-helium-discloses-share-sale-by-former-directors-associated-entity>>62075871Airship would be KINO, but with CERN using it too cool their particle acceleratirs and chuds getting MRIs they will always be expensive and not for the plebs
>>62075823Every MRI (hospital) and NMR (commercial and academic labs) instrument requires helium to operate. They can NOT go without regular helium top ups without risking the superconductors inside becoming literal bombs from the rapid electron resistance heat runaway.
>>62075780OP here, about to drop an llm summary of my Tungsten pick While this is not financial advice and involves significant speculation/high risk (as with all junior mining equities), here's a reasoned estimate of TUNGF's potential market cap if American Tungsten Corp. successfully reaches steady-state production at its targeted ~8% of U.S. tungsten demand level. This assumes they execute on the IMA Mine restart (500 tpd mill, ~1,825 tonnes WO3 equivalent per year from tungsten + moly/silver by-products), with no major delays, dilution beyond current plans, or execution failures. >Production target: Company guidance is ~1,825 t WO3/year (≈182,500 MTU), equating to their stated ~8% of U.S. demand (plus ~10% U.S. moly and >300k oz silver credits). >Gross revenue potential: Tungsten alone ~$500–550M annually at current prices (182,500 MTU × $2,900). By-products add material upside. (Note: Earlier pre-surge estimates were $80–150M; prices have transformed the economics >Realistic central range: $1.0B – $3.0B USD (roughly 10–30x from current levels). With china curbing exports, Tungsten America (Ticker TUNGF) is the obvious choice for a pure tungsten play. Timeline to restart the previous operational Mine (with EXCELLENT facilities still exisiting) is mid 2026 - Early 2027
>>62075823Needed for MRIs etc, limited supply