Canamera Energy Metals Ramps Up Marketing Push as Drilling Data Looms and Shares Hit New Lows
03.06.2026 - 16:33:24 | boerse-global.de
Rare earths junior Canamera Energy Metals is pulling out the stops on corporate visibility at a moment when its stock is plumbing fresh depths and drill results from two Brazilian projects hang in the balance. The explorer has committed US$650,000 to renewed digital marketing deals, betting that heightened awareness can bridge the gap until exploration data does the talking.
The larger agreement is with London-based Euro Digital Media Ltd., running 60 to 90 days at a cost of US$500,000. Management retains the flexibility to shorten or extend the campaign. All payments are in cash — no shares will be issued. Euro Digital Media, which operates at arm’s length, holds no Canamera equity. This marks the third extension of the arrangement following earlier signings in October, January and March. A separate US$150,000 contract with Gold Standard Media LLC runs for six months. The twin campaigns target digital display ads, keyword research, remarketing and custom landing pages, all aimed at boosting the company’s profile across capital markets.
The spending spree comes as shareholders digest a prolonged share price slide. The stock notched a fresh 52-week low of €0.18 on Wednesday, shedding 4.64% on the day. That leaves it roughly 74% below the year’s peak of €0.71. Over the past month alone, the loss totals nearly 34%. For context, several larger uranium producers have logged double-digit gains lately, lifted by rising futures and policy support for US nuclear fuel production. Canamera, still in early-stage exploration, is trying to ride that sector tailwind without any production of its own.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Canamera Energy Metals?
Financially, the company is walking a fine line. On one hand, it has raised more than US$10 million over the past four months, providing runway for ongoing programs. On the other, its most recently reported cash position stands at approximately C$4.32 million, against a trailing twelve-month net loss of C$2.31 million. The US$650,000 marketing outlay therefore represents a material slice of available liquidity.
The real catalysts, however, remain underground. In Brazil’s Minas Gerais state, the Turvolândia project has already delivered encouraging early results. First-phase drilling confirmed ion-adsorbed clay mineralization with total rare earth oxide (TREO) grades exceeding 6,000 ppm in some intervals. One near-surface hole returned 3,255 ppm TREO over 13 metres. Canamera expanded the program by 20% in April. Meanwhile, at São Sepé in Rio Grande do Sul, a second drilling campaign is underway across approximately 500 metres, targeting three priority zones named Sara, Erica and Maya. Historical surface samples flagged elevated rare earth oxide values, and the current work aims to test lateral continuity. Results are expected in four to six weeks.
Closer to home, North American projects add further optionality. At Schryburt Lake in Ontario, the company filed an independent technical report at the end of April recommending a C$1.5 million phase?1 program across five rare earth and niobium targets. The portfolio also includes Iron Hills in Colorado, Garrow and Waterslide in northern Ontario, Great Divide Basin in Wyoming, and Mantle in British Columbia. Separately, Canamera has signed a letter of intent to option another ion-adsorbed rare earth project in Brazil, signalling ambitions to deepen its Latin American footprint.
For now, all eyes are on the assay lab. The marketing push may increase the number of eyeballs on Canamera’s story, but sustained institutional interest will depend on what those geochemical numbers say. Grade, thickness and continuity remain the fundamental metrics that can reverse the slide.
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