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Northern Graphite Stock Price, News & Analysis

NGPHF OTC Link

Company Description

Northern Graphite Corporation (OTCQB: NGPHF), referenced here as NORTHERN GRAPHITE ORD, is a Canadian company listed on the TSX Venture Exchange that produces and develops natural flake graphite assets. According to company disclosures, it is the only flake graphite producing company in North America and is focused on supplying graphite to both traditional industrial markets and the fast‑growing battery and energy storage sectors.

Northern Graphite operates within the mining, quarrying, and oil and gas extraction sector and is associated with the graphite segment of the broader nonmetallic mineral mining industry. The company describes a strategy of becoming a vertically integrated, mine‑to‑battery or mine‑to‑market supplier of battery anode material ("BAM"), the main graphite component used in lithium‑ion batteries for electric vehicles and energy storage systems.

Core operations and graphite assets

The company’s cornerstone producing asset is the Lac des Îles (LDI) graphite mine in Quebec.> Northern states that LDI is North America's only operating graphite mine and that it produces graphite concentrate for industrial customers, with installed capacity at the site that the company aims to utilize more fully over time. LDI has historically supplied traditional markets such as refractories for steelmaking, heat management in electronics, and friction materials for the automotive sector. Northern has reported work to extend the LDI pit and mine life, supported by Canadian federal government financing under the Regional Economic Growth Through Innovation Program, to help maintain production from this mine.

Beyond LDI, Northern Graphite owns additional graphite projects. These include the Bissett Creek graphite project in Ontario, described as a large‑scale, advanced stage project, and the Okanjande graphite mine in Namibia, which the company describes as fully permitted and on care and maintenance. Northern has indicated that Okanjande represents an opportunity to substantially increase graphite production at a lower cost and with a shorter time to market than many competing projects. Company communications also reference the Mousseau project as part of its development pipeline.

Mine‑to‑battery and downstream strategy

Northern Graphite repeatedly describes a strategy to move beyond mining into downstream processing and battery materials. The company’s stated goal is to upgrade natural graphite into high‑value products that are critical to what it calls the green economy, including anode material for lithium‑ion batteries and electric vehicles, fuel cells, graphene applications, and advanced industrial technologies.

This strategy is led by Northern’s Battery Materials Group (also referred to as NGC Battery Materials or NGCBM in some releases). The company reports that this group operates a fully equipped, state‑of‑the‑art laboratory in Frankfurt, Germany. Through this unit, Northern is working on battery anode material development, qualification, and technology partnerships. The company notes that its projects contain "battery quality" graphite and are located close to infrastructure in what it describes as politically stable jurisdictions.

International partnerships and processing initiatives

Northern Graphite has announced several collaborations intended to support its integrated graphite and BAM ambitions. One initiative is a letter of intent with Alkeemia S.p.A. in Italy, under which Northern plans to take up to 50 percent of the production capacity at a graphite purification pilot plant in Porto Marghera. The plant is intended to test a hydrofluoric acid‑based purification process that Alkeemia has developed and verified at lab scale. Northern states that this process targets very high‑purity graphite for lithium‑ion batteries and is intended to be more efficient and have a lower carbon footprint than competing technologies in China. Under the tolling arrangement, graphite concentrate feedstock is expected to be sourced from Northern’s Okanjande mine in Namibia and the Lac des Îles mine in Quebec.

The company also reports a joint project with Rain Carbon Canada Inc. under the Canada‑Germany Collaborative Industrial Research and Development Program. This initiative focuses on transforming low‑value natural graphite fine fractions, a byproduct of processing, into high‑performance, battery‑grade anode material. Northern’s German battery materials unit and Rain Carbon Canada plan to integrate upstream graphite feedstock with downstream processing and electrochemical testing, with the stated goal of increasing milling and shaping yield, reducing waste, and lowering the carbon footprint per kilogram of battery material.

Planned BAM facilities and geographic footprint

Northern Graphite has outlined plans to develop battery anode material facilities in North America and Europe. Company disclosures mention a planned BAM plant in Baie‑Comeau, Quebec, where Northern is evaluating the feasibility of a brownfield facility at a former paper mill site to potentially reduce capital expenditure and time to market. The company also refers to plans for BAM facilities in France and notes that its proposal to upgrade graphite from the Okanjande project into BAM in France has been selected as a Strategic Project under the European Union’s Critical Raw Materials Act, qualifying it for fast‑tracked permitting and potential funding support.

In addition, Northern has announced a term sheet with Al Obeikan Group for Investment Company in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia to jointly develop a large‑scale BAM facility in Yanbu Industrial City. The proposed joint venture company is to be majority‑owned by Obeikan and minority‑owned by Northern. The term sheet contemplates an approximately US$200 million facility with an initial 25,000 tonnes per year of BAM production capacity, scalable over time. The project is aligned, according to the parties, with Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 and global efforts to build non‑Chinese graphite anode supply chains. The joint venture is expected to source up to 50,000 tonnes per year of graphite concentrate from Northern’s Okanjande mine under a long‑term offtake agreement, and Northern would also receive a royalty on net BAM sales in addition to its equity interest.

Government support and policy context

Company news releases emphasize that Northern Graphite’s activities intersect with critical minerals policies in Canada, Europe, and the United States. The Canadian federal government has provided an interest‑free, unsecured contribution to finance a significant portion of the LDI pit extension costs, citing the importance of the mine to Canada’s critical minerals strategy and domestic graphite supply. Northern notes that its projects have been highlighted at meetings such as the G7 Energy and Environment Ministers’ Meeting in Toronto, and that its initiatives have been recognized under the G7 Critical Minerals Action Plan.

Northern also references trade and policy developments in the United States, including preliminary determinations by the U.S. Department of Commerce regarding countervailing and anti‑dumping duties on Chinese graphite active anode material, and broader tariff measures. The company positions itself, in its own communications, as a founding member of the North American Graphite Alliance and as engaging with policymakers to support domestic and regional graphite supply chains.

Business model and revenue drivers

Based on the company’s own descriptions, Northern Graphite’s business model combines upstream mining and downstream processing and technology. Upstream, it produces graphite concentrate at Lac des Îles and aims to restart and expand production at Okanjande, while advancing Bissett Creek and other projects toward development. Downstream, it is pursuing BAM production, purification partnerships, technology licensing, and R&D collaborations that can generate revenue from processing, licensing, and value‑added graphite products.

The company has reported license revenue from an agreement to license its carbon material processing technology to a third party for industrial applications, with associated payments and anticipated royalties. It also highlights demand from industrial clients for graphite concentrate, particularly large and jumbo flake sizes from LDI, and notes that it negotiates pricing with customers and manages inventory and production to meet demand.

Risk factors and operational considerations

Northern Graphite’s public updates indicate that its operations can be affected by maintenance requirements, plant availability, permitting timelines, and financing arrangements. The company has described intermittent and temporary shutdowns at LDI due to planned and unplanned maintenance and technical challenges, and has noted periods when the mine and mill were placed on temporary care and maintenance to address equipment issues and advance critical upgrades. It has also disclosed senior secured debt and royalty financing arrangements, covenant waivers, and efforts to amend terms to align with project timelines and market conditions.

Permitting and regulatory approvals are another area of focus. For example, the company has discussed the need for certificates of authorization related to pit depth at LDI and for approvals associated with expansion phases. For its international initiatives, such as the Yanbu BAM project, Northern notes that completion of the joint venture is subject to definitive agreements, feasibility studies, regulatory and permitting approvals, and other customary conditions.

Position within the graphite and battery materials sector

Within the graphite and broader battery materials sector, Northern Graphite presents itself as a supplier of natural flake graphite with an integrated approach that spans mining, processing, and advanced material development. Its communications emphasize the role of graphite as a key component in lithium‑ion batteries and the importance of developing supply chains outside of China. The company’s combination of a producing mine in Quebec, permitted and advanced projects in Canada and Namibia, a battery materials laboratory in Germany, and planned BAM facilities in North America, Europe, and the Middle East forms the basis of its stated mine‑to‑battery strategy.

Frequently asked questions (FAQ)

  • What does Northern Graphite Corporation do?
    Northern Graphite is a Canadian company that produces and develops natural flake graphite assets. It operates the Lac des Îles graphite mine in Quebec and owns additional projects in Ontario and Namibia. The company aims to upgrade its graphite into high‑value products, including battery anode material for lithium‑ion batteries and other advanced applications.
  • Where are Northern Graphite’s main projects located?
    According to company disclosures, Northern’s key assets include the producing Lac des Îles mine in Quebec, the Bissett Creek graphite project in Ontario, and the fully permitted Okanjande graphite mine in Namibia, which is on care and maintenance. The company also operates a battery materials laboratory in Frankfurt, Germany.
  • How does Northern Graphite describe its business strategy?
    Northern states that it is pursuing a mine‑to‑battery or mine‑to‑market strategy. This involves extending and expanding production at its existing mines, advancing development projects, and building or partnering on downstream facilities to produce battery anode material and other value‑added graphite products in North America, Europe, and other regions.
  • What is Battery Anode Material (BAM) and why is it important to Northern Graphite?
    Battery anode material is the graphite‑based material used in the anodes of lithium‑ion batteries. Northern identifies BAM as a core focus and is working to produce BAM from its natural graphite through its Battery Materials Group, partnerships such as those with Alkeemia and Rain Carbon Canada, and planned BAM plants in locations including Baie‑Comeau, France, and Yanbu Industrial City in Saudi Arabia.
  • What government support has Northern Graphite reported receiving?
    The company has reported an interest‑free, unsecured contribution from the Canadian federal government to finance a significant portion of the Lac des Îles pit extension costs under the Regional Economic Growth Through Innovation Program. It has also noted funding support for R&D collaborations under the Canada‑Germany Collaborative Industrial Research and Development Program.
  • How is Northern Graphite involved in European battery materials initiatives?
    Northern’s German battery materials unit operates a laboratory in Frankfurt focused on BAM development. The company has an LOI with Alkeemia in Italy for graphite purification and has reported that its proposal to upgrade graphite from the Okanjande project into BAM in France was selected as a Strategic Project under the European Union’s Critical Raw Materials Act.
  • What role does the Okanjande mine in Namibia play in Northern’s plans?
    Okanjande is described as a fully permitted graphite mine on care and maintenance that offers the potential to substantially increase Northern’s graphite production at lower cost and with shorter time to market than many competing projects. The company plans to use Okanjande concentrate as feedstock for BAM facilities, including the proposed Yanbu plant and purification initiatives in Europe.
  • Is Northern Graphite currently producing graphite?
    Northern states that it is the only flake graphite producing company in North America, with production from its Lac des Îles mine in Quebec. The company has also reported periods of temporary care and maintenance at LDI to address equipment issues and complete maintenance and upgrades, but continues to present LDI as its flagship producing operation.
  • How does Northern Graphite address environmental and supply chain considerations?
    Company communications highlight efforts to reduce waste and carbon footprint through projects that upcycle graphite byproducts into battery‑grade materials and through partnerships aimed at cleaner purification technologies. Northern also emphasizes secure, traceable, and non‑Chinese supply chains for graphite and battery anode materials as part of its positioning in Western critical minerals strategies.
  • What is the significance of Northern’s joint venture plans in Saudi Arabia?
    Northern has signed a term sheet with Al Obeikan Group for Investment Company to develop a BAM plant in Yanbu Industrial City. The planned facility would use graphite concentrate from Northern’s Okanjande mine and is described as aligned with Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 and global efforts to diversify graphite anode supply chains beyond China.

Stock Performance

$0.1305
-3.35%
0.00
Last updated: March 24, 2026 at 14:09
+95.09%
Performance 1 year
$19.9M

Northern Graphite (NGPHF) stock last traded at $0.1350, down 3.35% from the previous close. Over the past 12 months, the stock has gained 95.1%. At a market capitalization of $19.9M, NGPHF is classified as a micro-cap stock with approximately 158.3M shares outstanding.

SEC Filings

No SEC filings available for NGPHF.

Financial Highlights

Revenue (TTM)
Net Income (TTM)
Operating Cash Flow

Upcoming Events

JUN
30
June 30, 2026 Operations

Final feasibility study

Final Feasibility Study targeted by JV; completion subject to agreements, permits, financing
FEB
09
February 9, 2027 Corporate

First RSU vesting

One-third of 4.85M RSUs vest (3.7M to executives) from Feb 9, 2026 grant.
MAR
09
March 9, 2027 Corporate

Earliest DSU vesting date

DSUs vest no earlier than one year after grant; performance conditions apply
JAN
01
January 1, 2028 - December 31, 2028 Operations

First-phase production

Phase I BAM plant (25,000 tpy) production forecast in Yanbu, Saudi Arabia; JV with Al Obeikan
JAN
01
January 1, 2028 Operations

BAM facility begins operations

FEB
09
February 9, 2028 Corporate

Second RSU vesting

Second one-third of 4.85M RSUs vests from Feb 9, 2026 grant.
FEB
09
February 9, 2029 Corporate

Final RSU vesting

Final one-third of 4.85M RSUs vests from Feb 9, 2026 grant.
FEB
09
February 9, 2031 Corporate

Option expiry (5-yr)

Options exercisable at $0.25 expire five years after Feb 9, 2026 grant.
MAR
09
March 9, 2031 Corporate

Option expiry date

Options expire five years from grant; exercisable at $0.25 until this date

Northern Graphite has 9 upcoming scheduled events. The next event, "Final feasibility study", is scheduled for June 30, 2026 (in 98 days). Investors can track these dates to stay informed about potential catalysts that may affect the NGPHF stock price.

Short Interest History

Last 12 Months

Short interest in Northern Graphite (NGPHF) currently stands at 114.4 thousand shares, up 81.6% from the previous reporting period, representing 0.1% of the float. Over the past 12 months, short interest has increased by 827.5%. This relatively low short interest suggests limited bearish sentiment.

Days to Cover History

Last 12 Months

Days to cover for Northern Graphite (NGPHF) currently stands at 1.0 days. This low days-to-cover ratio indicates high liquidity, allowing short sellers to quickly exit positions if needed.

NGPHF Company Profile & Sector Positioning

Northern Graphite (NGPHF) operates in the Other Industrial Metals & Mining industry within the broader Basic Materials sector and is listed on the OTC Link.

Investors comparing NGPHF often look at related companies in the same sector, including Namibia Critical Metals Inc (NMREF), St Georges Eco (SXOOF), Battery X Metals Inc (BATXF), Tnr Gold (TRRXF), and Full Circle Lithium Corp (FCLIF). Comparing financial metrics, valuation ratios, and stock performance across these peers can help investors evaluate NGPHF's relative position within its industry.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the current stock price of Northern Graphite (NGPHF)?

The current stock price of Northern Graphite (NGPHF) is $0.135 as of March 23, 2026.

What is the market cap of Northern Graphite (NGPHF)?

The market cap of Northern Graphite (NGPHF) is approximately 19.9M. Learn more about what market capitalization means .

What is Northern Graphite Corporation’s primary business?

Northern Graphite Corporation is a Canadian, TSX Venture Exchange listed company focused on natural flake graphite. It operates the Lac des Îles graphite mine in Quebec and owns additional graphite projects, with a stated goal of producing and upgrading graphite into high-value products such as battery anode material for lithium-ion batteries, fuel cells, graphene, and advanced industrial technologies.

Why is Northern Graphite considered significant in North America?

Northern describes itself as the only flake graphite producing company in North America, with its Lac des Îles mine in Quebec identified as North America’s only operating graphite mine. This position, combined with advanced projects and downstream plans, places the company at the center of efforts to build regional graphite supply chains.

What are Northern Graphite’s main graphite assets?

The company’s main assets include the producing Lac des Îles mine in Quebec, the large-scale, advanced stage Bissett Creek graphite project in Ontario, and the fully permitted Okanjande graphite mine in Namibia, which is on care and maintenance. Northern also references the Mousseau project as part of its development pipeline.

What does Northern Graphite mean by a mine-to-battery strategy?

Northern’s mine-to-battery strategy refers to its plan to control the value chain from graphite mining through to the production of battery anode material. This includes extending mine life and production at Lac des Îles, resuming and expanding production at Okanjande, advancing projects such as Bissett Creek, and developing downstream capacity in North America, Europe, and the Middle East to produce anode material and other value-added products.

What is the role of Northern’s Battery Materials Group?

The Battery Materials Group, based around a fully equipped laboratory in Frankfurt, leads Northern’s efforts to develop battery anode materials and related technologies. It works on processing natural graphite into battery-grade materials, supports R&D collaborations, and underpins the company’s vertically integrated supply chain ambitions for natural graphite-based BAM.

How is Northern Graphite involved in European graphite purification?

Northern has signed a letter of intent with Alkeemia S.p.A. in Italy to take up to 50 percent of the capacity of a graphite purification pilot plant in Porto Marghera. The plant is intended to demonstrate a purification process that Alkeemia has developed, and Northern plans to supply graphite concentrate from its Okanjande and Lac des Îles mines for toll processing into high-purity material for downstream applications.

What is the Okanjande graphite mine’s importance to Northern?

Okanjande, located in Namibia, is described as a fully permitted graphite mine currently on care and maintenance. Northern views it as an opportunity to substantially increase its graphite production at lower cost and with shorter time to market than many competing projects. It is also expected to supply concentrate for BAM facilities, including the planned Yanbu plant in Saudi Arabia and purification projects in Europe.

What government support has Northern Graphite reported for its projects?

Northern has reported an interest-free, unsecured contribution from the Canadian federal government to finance a large portion of the Lac des Îles pit extension costs under the Regional Economic Growth Through Innovation Program. It has also noted funding support for a joint R&D project with Rain Carbon Canada under the Canada-Germany Collaborative Industrial Research and Development Program.

What is the planned BAM facility in Yanbu Industrial City?

Northern has signed a term sheet with Al Obeikan Group for Investment Company to form a joint venture to build a battery anode material facility in Yanbu Industrial City in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. The term sheet outlines an approximately US$200 million project with an initial 25,000 tonnes per year of BAM production capacity, scalable over time, and includes a planned long-term offtake of graphite concentrate from Northern’s Okanjande mine.

How does Northern Graphite address waste and efficiency in graphite processing?

Through its collaboration with Rain Carbon Canada, Northern is working on a project to transform low-value natural graphite fine fractions, a byproduct of processing, into high-performance, battery-grade anode material. The goal is to increase milling and shaping yield, reduce waste, and minimize the need for additional mining, thereby lowering the carbon footprint per kilogram of battery material.