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Electric Royalties Ltd.
Electric Royalties Ltd. is a publicly traded royalty company traded on the TSX Venture Exchange under the ticker ELEC.
Electric Royalties Ltd.
Electric Royalties Ltd. is a publicly traded royalty company traded on the TSX Venture Exchange under the ticker ELEC. It was founded to acquire royalties, streams, and other interests in mining projects that supply metals critical to the electrification of transportation and energy storage. The firm targets a diversified portfolio across multiple battery-metal commodities. Royalty agreements typically cover lithium, cobalt, nickel, graphite, and manganese assets. The company does not own or operate mines; instead, it provides upfront capital to project owners in exchange for a percentage of future production revenue. Stampede Ventures, a project-generation and exploration company, holds a significant equity stake in Electric Royalties and provides deal flow (per Stampede Ventures website). As a publicly traded entity, Electric Royalties reports financial results quarterly. Its team size and individual professional names are not publicly listed in a standard management page format. The firm does not maintain a publicly discoverable LinkedIn presence or detailed office location data. Recent financial statements have been filed with Canadian regulators under SEDAR+, providing audited performance data. Electric Royalties' structural differentiator is its exclusive focus on energy-transition commodities — no precious metals or oil-and-gas royalties. This single-commodity-thesis approach creates a purity of exposure for investors seeking to bet on battery-metal demand without owning mining-operational risk. The company's public listing provides transparency not available in private royalty funds.
General information
Firm type
Asset Manager
Year founded
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AUM
Undisclosed
Location
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City
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Corporate office
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Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
What is Electric Royalties' business model?
Electric Royalties acquires royalties, streams, and other interests in mining projects that produce or are developing toward production of metals used in batteries for electric vehicles and energy storage. The company provides capital to project owners in exchange for a percentage of future revenue or production from the mine. It does not operate any mines itself (per the firm's TSX listing documents).
What commodities does Electric Royalties focus on?
The firm focuses exclusively on metals critical to the energy transition: lithium, cobalt, nickel, graphite, manganese, and other battery-related commodities. This excludes precious metals, copper, and oil-and-gas royalties — a narrower focus than peers like Franco-Nevada or Royal Gold (per the firm's investment thesis).
Is Electric Royalties a single family office or a public company?
Electric Royalties is a public company listed on the TSX Venture Exchange (ticker: ELEC). It is not a family office but operates as a royalty-and-streaming corporation. Stampede Ventures, a project-generation and exploration company, is a significant shareholder and provides deal sourcing, but the firm has a broad shareholder base (per Stampede Ventures relations).
How does Electric Royalties generate revenue?
Revenue comes from royalty payments and streaming agreements with mining operators. When a mine produces and sells concentrate or refined metal, Electric Royalties receives a contractual percentage or fixed payment per unit. The revenue is reported quarterly in financial filings under Canadian securities law.
Does Electric Royalties pay dividends?
The company has historically reinvested its cash flow into acquiring new royalties rather than paying dividends. As a growth-stage royalty company, it prioritizes portfolio expansion over shareholder distributions (per the firm's investor presentation).
How does Electric Royalties source deals?
Deal flow comes from relationships with project developers, mining companies, and through Stampede Ventures, which holds a strategic equity stake. The firm evaluates opportunities globally but focuses on assets with defined resources and a path to production.
What risks are associated with Electric Royalties' portfolio?
Risks include the pre-production stage of many royalty assets — no operating mine guarantees delivery. Commodity-price volatility for battery metals, permitting delays, and construction cost overruns at mines can delay or reduce royalty income. The company's small market capitalization also means limited liquidity for shareholders (per SEDAR+ risk disclosures).
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