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Antimony Resources Corp – Weekly Recap

Antimony Resources Corp – Weekly Recap

Antimony Resources Corp is the focus of this week’s recap, which highlights its strategic positioning in U.S. critical mineral supply chains. The company disclosed new institutional ties and emphasized assets it believes align with growing U.S. policy support for domestic tungsten and antimony production.

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Antimony Resources announced it has joined the U.S. Defense Industrial Base Consortium, providing a direct channel to engage with Department of War programs targeting critical-mineral supply security. Membership is expected to improve access to defense agencies, prime contractors, and industrial partners focused on domestic processing and refining.

Operating under the AT4 name, the company has submitted multiple funding applications to the Department of War and the Department of Energy, which are currently under review. It also plans to host a government-level critical minerals event in Utah on 15 May 2026, aimed at increasing visibility with policymakers and industry stakeholders.

In a separate update, Antimony Resources highlighted that U.S. policy, defense funding, and private capital are converging to rebuild tungsten supply chains and lessen reliance on China. Citing a Fastmarkets article, the company noted that government support appears to favor near-term, brownfield, restart, and processing-led projects.

The company pointed to its Tennessee Mountain Project in Nevada as aligned with these priorities, emphasizing historical drill results that include intervals such as 9m at 0.65% WO₃ and 2.13m at 2.06% WO₃. Additional reported intercepts, including 38m at 0.72% WO₃ from surface, were presented as reinforcing the project’s strategic potential.

Antimony Resources also underscored its fully permitted Dutch Mountain tungsten processing facility in Utah as part of an “accelerated practical pathway” to potential U.S. tungsten production. The combination of a permitted processing asset and a Nevada project with historical drilling data could position the company to benefit from emerging critical mineral policies if funding and offtake support materialize.

No new financial commitments or contracts have been announced, and funding applications remain pending, leaving the ultimate impact on revenue and valuation uncertain. Overall, the week marked a series of steps by Antimony Resources to align more closely with U.S. defense and energy priorities while showcasing assets that may fit evolving domestic tungsten and antimony strategies.

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