Americas Gold and Silver Corporation
USA · XTSE · Other Industrial Metals & Mining · Canada
Americas Gold and Silver Corporation is a Canadian-based precious metals mining company established in 1998, specializing in the exploration, development, and production of mineral properties primarily in North America. The company focuses on key commodities such as silver, gold, antimony, copper, zinc, and lead. Its main assets include the Galena Complex in Idaho, USA, an advanced operation notable for its high-grade silver and leading antimony production; the Cosalá Operations in Sinaloa, Mexico; and the Relief Canyon Mine in Nevada, USA. With a diverse portfolio, Americas Gold and Silver leverages a robust reserve base and emphasizes operational efficiency and cash flow generation. The company’s strategic initiatives include lowering production costs, expanding exploration, and capitalizing on commodity price optionality. It plays a significant role as a junior silver producer while also contributing to the supply of critical metals like antimony, which is rare in U.S. mining operations. Headquartered in Toronto, Canada, Americas Gold and Silver combines sustainable mining practices with exploration potential to maintain and grow its presence in the materials sector.
Industry
Other Industrial Metals & Mining
Basic Materials sector · Canada
Stories
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Key Metrics
This company does not currently pay dividends.
Valuation9
Coordination
Supply Chain
Lithium Supply Chain
The lithium supply chain is shaped by three structural constraints that most commodity systems do not face simultaneously: extraction methods diverge so fundamentally that brine evaporation and hard-rock mining produce different timelines, geographies, and cost structures from the same element; chemical refining is concentrated in China regardless of where lithium is mined; and demand grows on EV product cycles while new mine development takes five to seven years, creating a timing mismatch the system cannot resolve through price alone.
Rare Earth Elements Supply Chain
The rare earth supply chain is governed by three structural constraints that most industries never encounter: rare earth elements occur together in ore and cannot be mined individually, separation requires toxic acid-based processes that produce radioactive waste, and China controls roughly sixty percent of mining and ninety percent of processing capacity worldwide.
Copper Supply Chain
The copper supply chain is shaped by three structural constraints that compound over time: ore grades are declining, forcing more energy and processing per ton of output; smelting and refining capacity is concentrated in China, which processes roughly forty percent of global copper; and new mines take ten to fifteen years from discovery to production, meaning supply cannot respond to demand on any timeline shorter than a decade.