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Our system has never spotted tantaluminvestingnews.com in Alexa ratings.
This fact suggests that domain has very low traffic.
The most recent time we have spotted tantaluminvestingnews.com on Quantcast list was on January 28, 2014 (3,768 days ago) and then the rank was 809,107. And this is a bit better position than average position for tantaluminvestingnews.com in Quantcast.
Website is hosted on IP 104.239.152.29.
The host name of this IP address is web1.investingnewsnetwork.com.
There are 18 websites hosted on exact the same IP and 104 websites that are hosted on similar IP address.
Our database records shows that this website can be similar to: uraniuminvestingnews.com, coalinvestingnews.com, ironinvestingnews.com, goldinvestingnews.com, graphiteinvestingnews.com, lifescienceinvestingnews.com, palladiuminvestingnews.com, rareearthinvestingnews.com, copperinvestingnews.com, tungsteninvestingnews.com and maybe even more.
We've checked tantaluminvestingnews.com recently and it was online. The load time was 3.0816 seconds slower than average. The size of document was 152,280 bytes longer than usually. The website contained 357 links more than the average.
It seems that tantaluminvestingnews.com is optimised for mobile devices.
We did not encounter any safety threats while testing this website.
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Our system found out that there could be 291 domains with the same beginning as tantaluminvestingnews.com
Our system found out that there could be 84 mistakes made in the typing process.
And here you'll find analysis of HTML code:
PROPERTY | VALUE |
---|---|
Keywords: | Tantalum Investing |
WEB address: | http://tantaluminvestingnews.com/ |
Summary: | Widely used in capacitors for computers and mobile phones, tantalum is certainly an important component in many modern technologies. About two-thirds of tantalum is used to construct electronic capacitors, a fundamental component in cellphones and other electronics. Tantalum’s use has contributed hugely to the miniaturization of hand held electronic devices, since tantalum allows for the storage of electricity in small capacitors. As one of the five major refractory metals, tantalum is also highly resistant to heat and wear, and has an extremely high melting point. It is also extremely ductile and can be drawn into a thin wire. Because it causes no immune response in humans, it is also used in the making of surgical appliances, as a replacement for bone, as a connector of torn nerves or a binding agent for muscles. Certainly, there are plenty of uses for tantalum, and as a result, the metal is highly sought after. Tantalum ores are found in parts of central Africa, as well as in Australia, Canada and Brazil. It is extremely rare, averaging only 2 parts per million in the earth’s crust. A large portion of the world’s tantalum is produced in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), and as such, the metal is the subject of plenty of controversy with regards to conflict minerals. The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) implemented a conflict minerals rule as part of the Dodd-Frank act, requiring publicly traded manufacturers to disclose to investors whether any of the tantalum, tin, gold and tungsten used in their products may have originated from the conflict-ridden Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). Companies have fought hard against the new rule, and only five percent of businesses filed reports tracing the conflict status of materials used in their products, according to a report from PricewaterhouseCoopers. Still, the European Parliment has followed suit, enacting its own conflict minerals rule in May 2015. The decision still has to be discussed with EU member states and the European Commission before the new regulations are put in place. The top tantalum producing country for 2014 was Rwanda, which put out 250 tons of the metal, followed by the DRC with 180 tons. Other countries on the list included Brazil (98 tons), Mozambique (85 tons), China (60 tons) and Nigeria (60 tons). The US has not produced tantalum since 1959, according to the United States Geological Survey. The market for tantalum is extremely small, and the critical metal is not traded on commodities exchanges. However, investors may gain exposure to tantalum by investing in tantalum mining companies. There are some junior exploration and development companies looking to move ahead with tantalum projects in North America. Critical Elements (TSXV:CRE) holds the Rose tantalum-lithium project located in Quebec’s James Bay region, while Commerce Resources (TSXV:CCE) holds the Blue River Tantalum and Niobium Deposit in British Columbia. Elsewhere in the world, Pilbara Minerals (ASX:PLS) is moving ahead with its Tabba Tabba and Pilgangoora tantalum-lithium projects in Western Australia, while another Aussie company, Gippsland (ASX:GIP), is looking to start production at its Abu Dabbab tantalum-tin-feldspar project in Egypt by 2016. With the importance of tantalum in everything from laptops to iphones, savvy investors may want to take a closer look at the critical metal. |
<title> | Tantalum Investing News - Investing News Network |
Hosting information: | Click here for more hosting information |
Size of HTML code: | +152,280 bytes compared to average |
Total number of links: | +357 links compared to average |
Load time: | +3.08159435 seconds compared to average |
META TAG PROPERTY | VALUE |
og:url | http://investingnews.com/category/daily/resource-investing/critical-metals-investing/tantalum-investing/ |
og:description | Widely used in capacitors for computers and mobile phones, tantalum is certainly an important component in many modern technologies. About two-thirds of tantalum is used to construct electronic capacitors, a fundamental component in cellphones and other electronics. Tantalum’s use has contributed hugely to the miniaturization of hand held electronic devices, since tantalum allows for the storage of electricity in small capacitors. As one of the five major refractory metals, tantalum is also highly resistant to heat and wear, and has an extremely high melting point. It is also extremely ductile and can be drawn into a thin wire. Because it causes no immune response in humans, it is also used in the making of surgical appliances, as a replacement for bone, as a connector of torn nerves or a binding agent for muscles. Certainly, there are plenty of uses for tantalum, and as a result, the metal is highly sought after. Tantalum ores are found in parts of central Africa, as well as in Australia, Canada and Brazil. It is extremely rare, averaging only 2 parts per million in the earth’s crust. A large portion of the world’s tantalum is produced in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), and as such, the metal is the subject of plenty of controversy with regards to conflict minerals. The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) implemented a conflict minerals rule as part of the Dodd-Frank act, requiring publicly traded manufacturers to disclose to investors whether any of the tantalum, tin, gold and tungsten used in their products may have originated from the conflict-ridden Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). Companies have fought hard against the new rule, and only five percent of businesses filed reports tracing the conflict status of materials used in their products, according to a report from PricewaterhouseCoopers. Still, the European Parliment has followed suit, enacting its own conflict minerals rule in May 2015. The decision still has to be discussed with EU member states and the European Commission before the new regulations are put in place. The top tantalum producing country for 2014 was Rwanda, which put out 250 tons of the metal, followed by the DRC with 180 tons. Other countries on the list included Brazil (98 tons), Mozambique (85 tons), China (60 tons) and Nigeria (60 tons). The US has not produced tantalum since 1959, according to the United States Geological Survey. The market for tantalum is extremely small, and the critical metal is not traded on commodities exchanges. However, investors may gain exposure to tantalum by investing in tantalum mining companies. There are some junior exploration and development companies looking to move ahead with tantalum projects in North America. Critical Elements (TSXV:CRE) holds the Rose tantalum-lithium project located in Quebec’s James Bay region, while Commerce Resources (TSXV:CCE) holds the Blue River Tantalum and Niobium Deposit in British Columbia. Elsewhere in the world, Pilbara Minerals (ASX:PLS) is moving ahead with its Tabba Tabba and Pilgangoora tantalum-lithium projects in Western Australia, while another Aussie company, Gippsland (ASX:GIP), is looking to start production at its Abu Dabbab tantalum-tin-feldspar project in Egypt by 2016. With the importance of tantalum in everything from laptops to iphones, savvy investors may want to take a closer look at the critical metal. |
og:locale | en_US |
og:type | object |
og:title | Tantalum Investing News - Investing News Network |
og:site_name | Investing News Network |
sitelock-site-verification | 6025 |
viewport | width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0 |
robots | noodp |
apple-mobile-web-app-capable | yes |
No data about Alexa yet.
This table shows websites that use 104.239.152.29 (web1.investingnewsnetwork.com) for hosting:
Note: The matching part of IP address is marked with this style.
Website: | tantaluminvestingnews.com |
---|---|
Most recent position: | 809,107 reached on January 28, 2014 (3,768 days ago) |
Times found in quant list: | 110 |
Average position: | 677,624 |
All time highest position: | 425,767 reached on December 31, 2013 (3,796 days ago) |
All time lowest position: | 960,022 reached on January 21, 2014 (3,775 days ago) |
There are 291 alternatives to tantaluminvestingnews.com
We believe that these mistakes can be made in the typing process of "tantaluminvestingnews.com":
No data about tantaluminvestingnews.com being in dropped domains database...