The Critical Metal the West Can't Replace. OTCQB: NIOMF Is Drilling for It Right Now.
Niobium has no substitute, no U.S. production since 1959, and 92% of the world's supply concentrated in a single country. North American Niobium and Critical Minerals Corp. (OTCQB: NIOMF) is drilling for it in Quebec - permits signed, drills already turning at flagship Seigneurie, and first results weeks away.
By Stocktrade Research
11 min readUpdated April 23, 2026
Five things to know
- Governments are spending billions to break China's grip on critical minerals - the Pentagon alone wrote $5 billion last year.
- Niobium is one of those critical minerals: no substitute, no U.S. production since 1959, 92% from a single country.
- North American Niobium and Critical Minerals Corp. (OTCQB: NIOMF) - five Quebec properties on the same geology as North America's only producing niobium mine.
- Just 23.5 million shares, a 10,000-metre drill program already turning, and a board with a former Cliffs Natural Resources CEO and a former Canadian Defence Minister.
- Drills turning right now at flagship Seigneurie - ground last tested in 1978, before anyone was looking for niobium or rare earths.
The United States is receiving a wake-up call.
In January 2026, a bipartisan group of lawmakers proposed a new $2.5 billion agency with one purpose: secure America's critical minerals supply chain.
The Pentagon had already committed nearly $5 billion the year before trying to do the same thing.
Read that again.
$5 billion. In one year.
Not a policy debate. Not a committee hearing. A government writing emergency cheques.
Rare earth elements are inside every weapons system that defines North American military power.
Missile guidance. Fighter jets. Radar. Submarine propulsion.
China controls roughly 90% of the world's processing capacity for all of it.
This didn't happen by accident. Beijing spent decades building that dominance deliberately, systematically, quietly.
Washington looked the other way.
The looking away is over.
At this year's Critical Minerals Ministerial in Washington, with officials from 54 countries in the room, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio put it plainly: "we realized we had outsourced our economic security and our very future."
This didn't happen overnight.
- 2023
- China restricted exports of gallium and germanium.
- 2024
- Antimony and graphite followed.
- 2025
- Rare earth elements. The exact materials inside every advanced weapons system the West depends on.
This is not trade friction.
This is a sequenced, deliberate strategy. One mineral at a time. Testing how far it can go before the West pushes back.
The response has been overwhelming.
The U.S. Department of Defense signed a 10-year price floor contract for domestic rare earth production. The Pentagon became the single largest shareholder in America's only rare earth mining company.
Canada committed C$1.5 billion to its Critical Minerals Infrastructure Fund.
The G7 formally adopted de-risking as the policy framework for breaking mineral dependence on adversarial nations.
54 countries flew to Washington for an emergency minerals ministerial in February 2026.
Governments are not debating this anymore. They are spending.
And rare earths are only part of the story.
There is another metal inside this same crisis. One that receives almost no attention. One where the supply concentration is just as severe, the substitutes are just as nonexistent, and the strategic reserves are just as empty.
Niobium.
You have almost certainly never heard of it.
That is about to change.
It strengthens the steel in fighter jets and rocket bodies. It goes into the superalloys inside jet engines and the superconducting magnets at the heart of fusion energy research. A fraction of a percent added to ordinary steel transforms it into something the aerospace and defence industries cannot build without.
There is no viable substitute.
The United States has had no domestic niobium production since 1959.
There are no strategic reserves.
When President Trump imposed 50% tariffs on Brazilian imports in 2025, his administration explicitly carved niobium out of the restrictions.
A president running the most aggressive tariff campaign in modern history looked at niobium and decided it was too important to touch.
In November 2025, the U.S. Geological Survey made it official. Niobium ranked in the top 10 on the Final 2025 Critical Minerals List by economic risk to the United States.
The window to find a North American source just became urgent.
So where does that leave investors?
There is almost no way to buy niobium.
The entire publicly traded niobium universe in North America comes down to one name. NioCorp Developments. The most prominent publicly traded niobium play on the continent.
NioCorp has benefited from the tailwinds. The stock has been riding a long-term uptrend for over a year as the world slowly wakes up to what niobium is worth.
But NioCorp is one company. One mine. One entry point into a theme that is only getting more urgent.
But what if there was a company with not just niobium exposure, but the rare earth elements North America so desperately needs alongside it?
What if that company was exploring a massive land package in the same geological neighbourhood as the Niobec Mine?
What if the drills were already in the ground?
There is.
North American Niobium and Critical Minerals Corp. (OTCQB: NIOMF)
OTCQB: NIOMF came into existence in November 2025. The market has barely had time to find it.
That is the opportunity.
The macro case has never been stronger. The supply crisis is real and getting worse. The government money is moving. The window is open.
OTCQB: NIOMF is a company built for exactly this moment.
The market just hasn't found it yet.
From the NIOMF newsroom
Latest OTCQB: NIOMF press releases
- Published Apr 9
Here's a piece of this story that has gone almost entirely unnoticed. And it might be the most significant detail of all.
Forty-seven years ago, a Quebec government exploration crew drilled Seigneurie.
They were looking for uranium and thorium.
They hit wide intervals of mineralized rock. Logged everything carefully. Packed up and left.
They never came back.
Not because the ground disappointed them. Because nobody in 1978 was thinking about niobium. Nobody was thinking about rare earth elements. The world didn't need those metals yet. So nobody tested for them.
Those drill logs went into a government archive.
And stayed there. Untouched. For nearly half a century.
While China spent decades cornering the critical minerals market. While Western governments began writing emergency cheques to find new supply of the exact materials that crew walked away from without a second thought.
When OTCQB: NIOMF's geological team located those original drill collars in late 2025 and mapped them against modern surface data, what emerged was striking.
The mineralized system may exceed 300 metres in width. Open in all directions. Never once tested for niobium or rare earth elements.
The drill turning at Seigneurie right now is the first time anyone has gone back to find out what is actually there.
Forty-seven years later. At exactly the right moment.
Here is something most investors never think to ask.
Not whether the story is real. Whether the stock can actually reflect it.
In junior mining, that is not a given.
Most companies at this stage carry the weight of how they got here. Years of financing rounds. Cheap paper from early backers sitting just above wherever the stock trades. Warrants in the money, ready to hit the market the moment there is a bid.
Every time the stock moves, that paper comes out.
Like trying to fill a pool with the drain open.
- 23,580,599
- shares outstanding
- 235,704
- warrants
- 2,350,000
- options
That is the entire structure. Nothing hiding behind it.
When this story gets in front of the right people, there is nothing standing between the news and the price.
The stock has already had a strong reversal off its lows. Volume came with it. The market is starting to pay attention.
And this is still early.
The structure is clean. The macro is as loud as it has ever been. The next few months are set up in a way that does not come around often.
Ask any junior mining investor how many times they have heard this: “the company had a plan.”
Permits took longer than expected. Financing fell short. The timeline slipped. The update read like an excuse.
Nobody is necessarily to blame. Junior exploration is hard. The variables are endless.
But there is a reason some companies consistently beat those odds. And it is not luck.
In December 2025, weeks after listing, OTCQB: NIOMF published a detailed public exploration plan for 2026.
A specific budget. Specific properties. Specific milestones.
The financing round got oversubscribed.
Rather than stop there, they used the additional capital to expand the land package. Sabot added. Miskam staked. More ground, same discipline.
Q1 closed right on schedule. Geophysics done. Bedrock sampling done. Multiple drill targets identified across all five properties.
- March 26
- Seigneurie authorization received.
- April 2
- Drills turning.
- April 9
- Authorized to drill two more properties.
Clean. Methodical. On time.
That is what it looks like when the people running the company have already done this before.
Joseph Carrabba sits on OTCQB: NIOMF's board of directors. Before that, he spent over 20 years at Rio Tinto. Became Chairman, President, and CEO of Cliffs Natural Resources, one of the largest mining companies in North America. Then sat on the board of NioCorp Developments, North America's most prominent publicly traded niobium company.
The Honourable Kerry-Lynne Findlay also sits on the board. She served as Canada's Associate Minister of National Defence. She was not reading about the critical minerals crisis. She was part of the government response to it.
These are not people on their first company figuring it out as they go.
These are company builders who have already won. Who chose to be here, at the ground floor, at exactly this moment.
In most junior explorers, a board like that is the whole pitch.
Here it is one part of a larger picture.
When a team like this lays out a plan and executes it clean, and says 10,000 metres of drilling across five properties before the end of 2026, that statement carries a different weight.
The next several months are going to tell the story.
Why Now?
- A critical mineral that 92% of the world gets from one country.
- A North American explorer sitting in the right geology, in the right province, with the right permits already signed.
- A capital structure with nothing in the way.
- A team that has already proven it executes.
- And a market that has barely noticed.
That combination does not stay hidden for long.
If you want to be in front of it, the time to learn more is now.
North American Niobium and Critical Minerals Corp.
Stay plugged into 2026 drill updates, exploration milestones, and material company news as they happen, and get direct access to the OTCQB: NIOMF team for any questions you have.
This story is just getting started.
8 Reasons North American Niobium Deserves Your Attention Right Now
Reason 1: North America Just Woke Up to a Critical Minerals Emergency. And Niobium Is at the Centre of It.
Governments on two continents have spent the last two years reclassifying critical minerals from a supply chain footnote to a national security emergency. Niobium ranked in the top 10 on the U.S. Geological Survey's Final 2025 Critical Minerals List by economic risk to the United States. There are no strategic reserves. There are no viable substitutes. And 92% of global supply comes from Brazil.
Reason 2: There Is Almost No Public Way to Own This Theme. OTCQB: NIOMF Is One of the Only Doors.
Most investors who understand the niobium opportunity quickly run into the same wall. There is almost nothing to buy. The publicly traded niobium universe in North America is essentially one name. OTCQB: NIOMF gives investors something that barely exists: a pure play on niobium and rare earth elements combined, at early stage, before the market has caught up to the story.
Reason 3: The Right Ground. In the Right Province. Next to the Only Mine That Has Already Proven This Geology Works.
OTCQB: NIOMF's five properties sit in Quebec's Grenville Province, the same geological formation that hosts the Niobec Mine, the only producing niobium operation in the Western Hemisphere. This is not a proximity claim made for marketing purposes. It is a geological one. The same conditions that created a world-class niobium deposit in this province exist across OTCQB: NIOMF's land package.
Reason 4: The Ground Has Already Told a Story. Nobody Listened Until Now.
In 1978, a Quebec government crew drilled one of OTCQB: NIOMF's key properties looking for uranium and thorium. Those were the strategic metals the world needed then. They found something significant and walked away without ever testing it for niobium or rare earth elements. That data sat untouched in a government archive for 47 years. OTCQB: NIOMF's team went back in late 2025 and the interpreted mineralized system was far larger than anyone had realized, and now they are drilling it.
Reason 5: Two Critical Mineral Crises. One Company.
The rare earth element shortage is one of the biggest supply chain stories of the decade. These are the materials inside EV motors, missile guidance systems, and fighter jets that China controls and is actively restricting exports of. OTCQB: NIOMF is not just a niobium play. Surface sampling has already confirmed rare earth elements across multiple properties. One investment. Exposure to both sides of the crisis.
Reason 6: A 10,000 Metre Drill Program. On Schedule. With Results Flowing All Year.
In December 2025, weeks after listing, OTCQB: NIOMF published a detailed exploration plan with specific targets, specific budgets, and specific milestones. Then they hit every single one. Financing closed oversubscribed. Land package expanded. Permits secured. First hole in the ground April 2, 2026. And that is just the beginning. 10,000 metres planned across five properties before year end, meaning assay results, drill updates, and discovery potential throughout 2026. In a sector where timelines slip and excuses flow, OTCQB: NIOMF has done exactly what it said it would do. Every time.
Reason 7: A Clean Structure That Is Almost Unheard of in Junior Mining.
Most companies at this stage have spent years issuing shares to fund themselves, ending up with hundreds of millions of shares outstanding. When good news hits, all that paper creates selling pressure and caps how far the stock can move. OTCQB: NIOMF has 23,580,599 shares outstanding, 235,704 warrants, and 2,350,000 options. That is the entire structure. The same drill result hitting a company with 200 million shares versus 23.5 million hits very differently.
Reason 8: A Board of Heavy Hitters That Is Rare for a Company This Size.
Joseph Carrabba sits on OTCQB: NIOMF's board of directors. He spent over 20 years at Rio Tinto and went on to become Chairman, President, and CEO of Cliffs Natural Resources, one of the largest mining companies in North America. The Honourable Kerry-Lynne Findlay also sits on the board. She served as Canada's Associate Minister of National Defence and was not reading about the critical minerals crisis from the outside. She was part of the government response to it. At a company this size and this early in its story, a board like this does not happen by accident.
Where to find NIOMF
North American Niobium is listed as OTCQB: NIOMF and is available to look up on the exchanges and brokerages below.
These are convenience links to help you locate the security on supported platforms. They are not a recommendation, offer, or solicitation to buy or sell any security.
Quote data for OTCQB: NIOMF is delayed and provided by Yahoo Finance.
Disclaimer
Stocktrademarket.com is owned by The New Beverley Group ("We" or "Us") and We are not securities dealers or brokers, investment advisers or financial advisers, and you should not rely on the information herein as investment advice. North American Niobium & Critical Minerals Corp. made a one-time payment of One Hundred Thousand United States Dollars plus applicable taxes to The New Beverley Group to provide marketing services for a term of 3 months. This is a paid advertisement disseminated on behalf of North American Niobium & Critical Minerals Corp. This article is informational only and is solely for use by prospective investors in determining whether to seek additional information. This does not constitute an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to buy any securities. Examples that we provide of share price increases pertaining to a particular issuer from one referenced date to another represent an arbitrarily chosen time period and are no indication whatsoever of future stock prices for that issuer and are of no predictive value. Our stock profiles are intended to highlight certain companies for your further investigation; they are not stock recommendations or constitute an offer or sale of the referenced securities. The securities issued by the companies we profile should be considered high risk; if you do invest despite these warnings, you may lose your entire investment. Please do your own research before investing, including reading the company's SEDAR+ filings, press releases, and risk disclosures. It is our policy that information contained in this profile was provided by the company, extracted from SEDAR+ filings, the company website, and other publicly available sources. We believe the sources and information are accurate and reliable but we cannot guarantee it.
Forward-Looking Statements
This article contains forward-looking statements about North American Niobium & Critical Minerals Corp., which are identified by terms such as "anticipate," "expect," "plan," "intend," "believe," and "project." These statements reflect current views regarding company performance, business goals, exploration plans, potential mineralization, permitting and regulatory matters, and funding availability. The statements are based on current business and market expectations. However, they involve various risks and uncertainties, including potential delays, financial difficulties, and operational challenges. Additional risks include possible regulatory approval delays, market disruptions, personnel issues, and competitive pressures. Exploration activities are subject to risks inherent in mineral exploration, including uncertainty of exploration results, availability of financing, permitting, environmental and social considerations, access constraints, and changes in laws and regulations. Mineralization hosted on adjacent, nearby, or geologically similar properties is not necessarily indicative of mineralization hosted on the Company's properties. Given these risks and uncertainties, actual results may differ significantly from what is described in the forward-looking statements. Readers should not place undue reliance on these statements, which are only valid as of the article's publication date. Neither The New Beverley Group nor North American Niobium & Critical Minerals Corp. undertakes any obligation to update any forward-looking statements, except as required by applicable securities laws. Material factors and assumptions used to develop such forward-looking information include assumptions regarding exploration budgets, access and seasonal conditions, permitting timelines and regulatory approvals, availability of financing, and continuation of favourable market conditions.
Neither the Canadian Securities Exchange nor its Market Regulator accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this communication. North American Niobium & Critical Minerals Corp. trades on the Canadian Securities Exchange under the symbol NIOB and on the OTC Markets under the symbol NIOMF.








