Welcome to our dedicated page for Powermax Mineral news (Ticker: PWMXF), a resource for investors and traders seeking the latest updates and insights on Powermax Mineral stock.
Powermax Minerals Inc. (OTCQB: PWMXF) is a Canadian mineral exploration company focused on rare earth element (REE) projects, and its news flow centers on technical and corporate developments across its portfolio. The company issues detailed updates on exploration programs at its optioned Cameron REE Property in British Columbia, the Atikokan REE Property in northwestern Ontario, and the Pinard REE Property in northern Ontario, as well as its 100% owned Ogden Bear Lodge Project in Wyoming.
Recent news releases describe the commencement and completion of multi-phase field programs, including geological mapping, prospecting, rock, soil, and sediment sampling, and radiometric surveys. Powermax also reports on integrated geoscientific interpretations that combine magnetic, gravity, radiometric, and geochemical datasets to delineate high-priority REE targets, particularly at the Atikokan and Cameron projects.
Investors following PWMXF news can expect updates on exploration milestones, such as Phase 1 and Phase 2 program results, identification of REE-enriched corridors, and the design of follow-up work. The company also discloses option agreement terms and milestone payments related to property acquisitions, including the Pinard Rare Earths Project, along with information on net smelter returns royalties and buyback rights.
This news page aggregates Powermax Minerals’ press releases so readers can track the progression of its rare earth exploration strategy, from initial data compilation and GIS modeling through fieldwork, geochemical analysis, and target prioritization. For those monitoring rare earth-focused exploration companies, the PWMXF news feed provides a centralized view of the company’s technical updates and corporate announcements.
Powermax Minerals (OTCQB: PWMXF) entered an option agreement to acquire a 100% interest in the Pinard Rare Earths Project in northern Ontario, comprising 255 contiguous mining claims totaling 5,178 ha, subject to a 1.5% NSR (reducible to 1.0% for $500,000).
The Option requires cash and share payments totaling $90,000 and 320,000 common shares over three years, and Phase 1 exploration will include desktop GIS modeling, prospecting, rock/soil/stream sampling, radiometric surveys, and a helicopter-borne airborne geophysical survey. Closing is subject to CSE approval and customary conditions.
Powermax Minerals (OTCQB: PWMXF) has started a Phase 2 exploration program at the Cameron Rare Earth Element (REE) Project in the Kamloops Mining Division, British Columbia.
Phase 2 follows Phase 1 assays that confirmed REE mineralization across the property with TREE values from 17 ppm to 1,943 ppm and heavy mineral concentrate results up to 7,561 ppm. Work will include mapping, systematic rock sampling, stream sediment and soil surveys, and integration of geological, geochemical and geophysical data into GIS to refine drill targets. Fieldwork is underway and expected to take approximately 2–3 weeks, weather permitting.
Powermax Minerals (OTCQB: PWMXF) has begun a high-resolution helicopter-borne magnetic and gamma-ray spectrometric survey across its Atikokan REE Property (Blocks A, B, C) in northwestern Ontario on October 21, 2025. The program covers approximately 1,388 line-km with 100 m line spacing and will produce magnetic and radiometric products, element ratios, Geosoft-format grids, and a final technical report.
Survey data will be integrated with field mapping, geochemical sampling, and ground radiometrics as part of the Company’s 2025 Phase 1 exploration program to prioritize drill-ready REE targets for follow-up in 2026. The company also granted 200,000 stock options and 1,650,000 RSUs, both subject to shareholder approval.
Powermax Minerals (OTCQB: PWMXF) has started a 2025 exploration program at the Atikokan Property in Northwestern Ontario covering ~7,120 hectares. Phase 1 integrates desktop GIS modelling, prospecting, mapping, geochemical sampling and handheld radiometric surveys to test regional REE, uranium, thorium and niobium targets.
The program plans 100–150 rock, ~350 soil and 20–50 stream samples, with fieldwork lasting 4–6 weeks depending on terrain and weather; results will guide target prioritization and follow-up work in 2026.