United States Antimony Corporation (UAMY)
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Earnings Call: Q4 2025

Mar 19, 2026

Operator

Greetings. Welcome to the US Antimony Corporation fiscal year 2025 financial and operating results conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A question -and -answer session will follow the formal presentation. If anyone would like to ask a question during the presentation, you can submit a question at this time by clicking the Ask Question button on the left side of your screen. Type your question into the box and hit the Send button to submit your question. If anyone should require operator assistance during the webcast, please press star zero on your telephone keypad. Please note this conference call and webcast is being recorded. I will now turn the call over to your host, Gary C. Evans, Chairman and CEO. You may begin.

Gary C. Evans
Chairman and CEO, US Antimony Corporation

Thank you, Kevin. Thank you everybody for joining us today. I'd like to start this call by introducing other members of our company's senior management team who are joining me on this year-end conference call. We have Joe Bardswich, who's not only a Board Member, but he's an Executive Vice President and our Chief Mining Engineer for the company. Richard Isaak, who is our Senior Vice President, as well as our Chief Financial Officer. Melissa Pagen, who's President and Chief Operating Officer of one of our wholly owned subsidiaries called Bear River Zeolite. Jonathan Miller, who's Vice President of Investor Relations.

Before I turn over this call to various members of management to talk about their divisions, I thought I would just kind of give everybody a quick overview of the notable news that was worthy in calendar 2026. We first announced our tungsten acquisition, which was done in June. We call that property the Fostung. It's located up in Ontario, Canada, near the town of Sudbury. But more importantly, we just announced several weeks ago that this particular property, after we've acquired it and done some work, has an inferred resource value now exceeding $4.6 billion. And that's 'B' with a billion. We're very excited about this, and Joe's gonna talk a lot more about this when the call is turned over to him.

Another big announcement was a new $245 million contract, which has now been upgraded to $248 million with a DLA. That's a sole source contract to deliver antimony ingots to the U.S. government. Over five years, we anticipate delivering approximately $75 million of antimony ingots in fiscal 2026. We're very close to delivering our first pallet of ingots to the government. We also announced a new $106.7 million industrial antimony contract with a company that preferred not to be named principally for competitive reasons. This material that we'll be delivering and have been delivering to this company since probably June, July of last year, is used for industrial fabrics and flame retardants associated with these materials.

Again, this is a five-year agreement, and I actually took the top three executives of this company fishing yesterday on my boat, with the success we had, which was for sailfish. I'm now anticipating many more years of future business from them. The next big announcement was we added two new independent Board members on the USAC Board. General Jack Keane, who many of you see on TV as an active reporter on Fox News, as well as Jon Marinelli. We got a four-star general and a banker extraordinaire who I've known for 25, 30 years, who's an extraordinary banker. He's already been very helpful to our Board. We then opened up Stibnite Hill Antimony Mine up in Montana. That's where our existing smelter was built because of this mine.

We were successful in moving antimony down the mountain within weeks of opening that mine up. Again, Joe Bardswich will elaborate on this significant event further today. We restarted our Madero antimony smelter down in Mexico after rehiring the personnel. This location has the capacity to process approximately 200 tons per month of material and you'll start seeing a lot more of that business running through our financial statements in 2026. We announced the acquisition of 10% of a publicly traded company in Australia called Larvotto Resources Limited. We paid $37.2 million in cash, and this is a gold antimony mine that's currently underdeveloped that's owned by that company. With that, I'd like to kind of get into the financial results of the company.

We announced just, I guess, 20 minutes ago, our revenues were up 163%, our gross profit was up 185%, and we of course talked about our two contracts that total $354 million. I'm gonna let Rick give you a little more detail here on our year-end results. Rick Isaak, take over.

Richard Isaak
SVP and CFO, US Antimony Corporation

Thanks, Gary. I'll start with some comments on our consolidated results, kind of continue on with what you had just talked about. Sales for 2025 were $39.3 million, up 163% over the prior year. Antimony sales were up primarily due to price increases, and zeolite sales were up due to a combination of price and volume increases. Cost of sales increased by 156%, which was lower than our sales increase, primarily due to some favorable antimony ore purchases we completed and lower maintenance and repair costs at our zeolite facility located in Idaho.

As a result of these cost efficiencies, gross profit dollars grew by $6.4 million or 185% over the prior year, and gross margin grew by two percentage points from 23% to 25% year-over-year. Net loss increased from $1.7 million in 2024 to $4.3 million in 2025. It's important to note, however, that included in 2025's net loss was $6.7 million of non-cash expenses, whereas there was only $1.9 million of non-cash expenses included in 2024' s net loss. These non-cash expenses were predominantly related to stock compensation to our employees and our Board. With the improvement in this area and our other cash flow initiatives, our cash balance increased significantly.

Our cash position, including our U.S. Treasury securities and equity securities, totaled $91.3 million at the end of 2025, compared to cash only of $18.2 million at the end of 2024. Our working capital was $44.6 million at the end of 2025, which is an increase of $27.9 million compared to 2024. This increase was primarily due to increases in cash, inventory and U.S. Treasury securities. Our antimony inventory increased from 78 tons at the end of 2024 to 465 tons at the end of 2025. 17% of our antimony inventory at the end of 2025 was from our company-owned mine that Gary mentioned, that's located in Thompson Falls, Montana.

We continue to maintain a very low amount of debt on our books, $195,000 at the end of 2025. On the operations side, we became fully vertically integrated in our antimony division in 2025. On top of that, we strengthened and grew each of the three facets of this vertically integrated chain that will benefit 2026 and beyond. First, regarding procurement of ore, we historically procured antimony ore predominantly from one third-party source, and we now procure antimony and other critical minerals from many new sources, both internally and externally. Second, we're increasing our capacity to process these minerals into finished products. We're nearing completion on the expansion of our Thompson Falls antimony smelter that will more than triple its capacity.

We're completing the engineering phase in order to begin the construction of our new Hydromet facility located in Idaho with our JV partner, Americas Gold and Silver Corporation. To assist in funding some of this expansion, we were recently awarded $27 million from the U.S. Department of Defense. Third, we executed, as Gary said, two five-year sales contracts in 2025 to sell our finished products. We're also building our back office infrastructure to support this growth with additional personnel and new software. In 2026, we'll implement new accounting software that'll provide management with more information quicker than in the past for decision making. We recognize the opportunity and the need for critical minerals and are going after this market for our investors and for our country.

We will continue this strategy of growth, diversification and sustainability in a planful yet tenacious manner as we have in the recent past. I'll turn it back over to you, Gary.

Gary C. Evans
Chairman and CEO, US Antimony Corporation

Thank you, Rick. Before I turn the call over to Joe Bardswich, I want to mention something I failed to mention in my opening comments. We've continued to expand our existing mining claims in Alaska. Alaska, we believe, will be the heart of our future mining claims. We got a late start last year due to the state delays obtaining our mining claim permits. We think that there's a tremendous amount of potential. Joe is gonna update you on a recent acquisition we completed less than two months ago that may be in fact our most exciting antimony claim acquired by the company to date. We have a lot of anticipation for success in Alaska, and Joe, I'm sure, will elaborate that in his presentation. Joe? Joe, you may be on mute.

Joe Bardswich
Board Member, EVP, and Chief Mining Engineer, U.S. Antimony Corporation

Thank you, Gary. All right. I will start with Montana. The stibnite vein on this mountain behind the plant, the Stibnite Hill, has been mined by underground methods. The mining operations were shut down by the company in 1983 when the decision was made to relocate to Mexico. With much higher antimony prices, the decision was made to relook at our Montana Stibnite Hill prospects, but from the vantage of a surface operation instead of going back underground as previously mined. The veins on Stibnite Hill are about 2 ft in thickness, very flat lying, dipping at about 25 degrees, making it difficult to mine from underground. However, advances in excavation equipment design has made it possible to excavate this narrow vein from surface. A full description of our mining methods, including the concurrent reclamation program, is posted on our webpage.

During October and early November of last year, we undertook a surface trenching exploration program followed by a mining program, and we're able to truck 50 loads of ore from the excavation site to our Radersburg, Montana flotation mill. That added up to slightly more than 800 tons of material grading about 10% antimony. We anticipate that as soon as we complete upgrades to the Radersburg mill, which are underway, we will be able to produce material meeting military specs for primers for ammunition. The Radersburg mill is a modern flotation mill. Our metallurgical team will operate it efficiently and economically, and we'll also include some upgrades. I need to mention the work of our Consulting Geologist at Stibnite Hill, Peter Mester, who spearheaded the exploration and mining operations there. I've worked with Peter previously in underground operations.

He's a good geologist and understands mining and the importance of grade control. He was present in the hole for every bucket that was dumped into the trucks last year. We shut down when winter hit, and we will open up again as soon as the snow is gone, which we expect could be as early as 30 days from now. We'll carry that operation on right through to next winter. Montana DEQ has been very reasonable to work with at Stibnite Hill. We will be permitted for an anticipated six to seven months of our mining program in 2026. Turning to Alaska, we planned a program in the Ester Dome area similar to what we did in Montana. We submitted applications for permits in April of last year.

Delays in obtaining permits on our option, state mining claims forced us to acquire private patented mining claims, which required a lesser degree of permitting as compared to state or federal lands. We could get our program started at some point last year. We dealt for land covering the former Mohawk gold mine, which also reported a large quantity of antimony. Before we could proceed in Mohawk, we had to undertake a cleanup program on the property which was being used as a dumping ground by whomever. In September, we finally obtained our permits from the State of Alaska. We started out the trenching program, found the shears and veins containing the stibnite on the Mohawk, but they were not in sufficient quantity to be economic.

We were able to reclaim these trenches before winter weather shut us down, and we will continue with this trenching program in 2026. However, this year, we will tie it into an air track drill program to enable more positive definition of areas to be excavated and be able to plan the depth of the excavation from the drilling information. We also purchased a large property adjacent to the main highway in Fox, Alaska, and very close to the Department of Transportation scales. Along with several buildings that can be used as offices, storage, and living quarters. Before the onset of winter, we poured a large reinforced concrete slab to be used as a base for an upgrading, sorting, packaging, and palletizing operation to prepare stibnite for standard highway semi-truck transportation of stibnite to our Montana operations.

We acquired the Nolan Creek property about 265 mi north of Fairbanks from a trustee sale. We have been monitoring the news about this property since our arrival in Alaska and considered it to be one of the prime opportunities for stibnite in the state. The gold content of the material is also an added bonus. US Antimony have the people, the expertise, and the financial wherewithal to properly clean up this site and to continue the exploration and production program that the property deserves. An application for a notice level permit to cover cleanup exploration, road construction, and the excavation of a 1,000-ton bulk sample has been filed with the BLM with a copy to the state.

We are working on the filing of a plan of operations that would include the underground mining of the stibnite and gold that makes up the major portion of a vein running into the side of a hill. An independent 43-101 technical report written by a professional geologist well known to the US Antimony staff and commissioned by the previous owner stated a reserve of 42,400 tons grading 28% antimony and 0.408 ounces of gold per ton on site. We confirmed with the author that that material is still there. The in-situ metal value at today's metal prices is close to $7,000 per ton, for a total value of approximately $297 million. The property cost us $1.3 million.

The first property that we staked in Alaska covered the MK copper deposit. 13 samples taken by geologists in a state of Alaska geological assessment program yielded values averaging 16.5% copper, 2.2 ounces of silver, and 0.08 ounces of gold per ton. That is in excess of $2,000 per ton. We have contracted with an Alaska-based professional geological services company for the supply of professional geologists, and also contracted with a core drilling firm to drill the MK deposit this summer with possible movement of the drill to the Nolan Creek deposit. This contracting firm are well known by our full-time geologists, Rod Blakestad and Rebecca Gower. Even with that help, we will soon be very busy in Alaska. We will also continue our programs in Ontario, Canada.

Work on the Iron Mask high-grade cobalt nickel project was shut down for the winter months. After clearing, grubbing, and mechanical stripping of the bedrock, followed by hand cleaning, power washing, and Clorox cleaning of the rock to eliminate the surface oxy-oxidation rind. The bedrock was mapped, sampled, with samples submitted for age dating and chemical analysis. The mapping program determined that the high-grade zone was cut off by a younger diabase dike. This was a disappointment. Our future efforts will start with attempts to pick up the continuation of the high-grade zone on the other side of the dike.

At the Fostung Tungsten deposit, we successfully collected a bulk sample with portions sent to CPRO Metallurgical in Vancouver for gravity testing and to Lakefield Research in Lakefield, Ontario, to conduct a metallurgical test on upgrading the scheelite containing the tungsten into a sellable product. We engaged the Toronto office of independent geological consulting firm SRK Consulting to author a technical report meeting the SEC's Regulation S-K 1300 requirements. They calculate an inferred mineral resource of 14,770,000 metric tons grading 0.17% WO3, tungsten trioxide, and containing 54.17 million pounds of tungsten. In other words, metal WO3, with a future gross value of $4.6 billion based on recent tungsten pricing. SRK has recommended additional drilling to test for extensions of the mineralization on strike to the southwest of the deposit where the geological conditions are favorable.

Our final technical report on this project will be filed with the SEC next week. We've built a great team of geologists and mining engineers to go along with our acknowledged leadership in the metallurgical treatment and production of antimony products. The prospectors, geologists, and property owners involved in the exploration for critical minerals in the U.S. and Canada recognize our strengths, and we enjoy a most favored status when we're looking for and negotiating terms for the acquisition of additional critical mineral properties of merit. We'll continue down this path. Thank you. Over to you, Gary.

Gary C. Evans
Chairman and CEO, US Antimony Corporation

Thanks, Joe. Before I turn over the call to the next speaker, I just want to say a few things about what Joe has accomplished, for our company. To think that we just really started back mining, about a year and three months ago, and to look at what we've achieved. We've moved 800 tons of rock off the mountain in Montana after just two weeks of work. We've got tremendous assets in Alaska. We have a new acquisition we completed a couple of months ago, that Joe just described that we will be filing. We'll be doing a new resource report on that. It's very unusual to be able to buy an acquisition like that and have a reserve report that's already been commissioned in earlier years.

The property up in Canada, the tungsten Fostung property to have the kind of resource report that we'll be filing with the SEC next week showing $4.6 billion of tungsten. There hasn't been tungsten mined in the United States in 12 years. To think that we have three active projects, Montana, Alaska, and Canada, in critical minerals in less than a year and three months, shows you the speed and the type of professional people that work at this company. I'm giving them the credit. We've got great geologists in Alaska. We just hired a new mining engineer to assist Joe. We have contract geologists in Montana, contract geologists up in Canada. We are doing things in warp speed.

It's a different view than a typical mining company that takes 5, 10, and 15 years to do something. We're doing it now. That is what is so different and what investors need to take a hard look and see what we're doing, that you're gonna see immediate results. You'll see some of these results in 2026, a lot more of them in 2027. That is very unusual for a company of this type, being a still considered a small miner. Now I'd like to turn the call over to Melissa Pagen. Melissa has been promoted as President and Chief Operating Officer of our Bear River Zeolite division. Bear River is our zeolite company. It's located up in Preston, Idaho.

When I first got involved with this company three years ago, I focused on trying to get that particular property up and running. It was in really dismal shape. We had to change management. We brought new people in, and that operation is really running smoothly. Joe had the foresight last year to instigate a reserve report, which we did. I think we drilled 80-some-odd holes up there, determined we have a 400-year reserve life with some of the highest quality zeolite, we believe, in the world. That reserve report is filed with the SEC, and you can take a look at it. Now that we know we have our operation running good, we got good people, we have a tremendous reserve of zeolite at this property, it's now time to increase sales.

We had some small increase in sales in 2025, but I think you'll see dramatic increase in sales in 2026, and that is what Melissa and her team are working so hard to do. Melissa, I'll turn it over to you.

Melissa Pagen
President and COO, Bear River Zeolite

Thank you, Gary. Hi everyone, and thank you for the opportunity to speak with you today. Since stepping into my new management role in January, my overarching goal has been to bring market focus and structure to BRZ as we position it for our future growth objectives. We have three initial priorities, and those are strategic focus, operational capabilities to support our focus, and continued efforts toward increasing our visibility in these focus markets. First, one of the realities of working with a material like zeolite is that it has a really broad range of potential applications. That versatility is certainly one of its greatest strengths, but that can also create a temptation for a small company like BRZ to pursue too many opportunities at once, which can spread a lean team too thin.

That makes two primary segments our priority, where we already have traction and where we believe we can build meaningful market presence, and that's Water Treatment and Agriculture. Water Treatment is already approximately 75% of our revenue. We are working on reaching more of our core filtration media business through conference circuits, networking, and the launch of social media marketing channels with the adoption of an AI agentic tool. This can be done, if this can be done securely, and I'm still learning on that front, but I think this tool can be really helpful for marketing in a small company. I'm also exploring long-term supply contracts with customers in drinking Water Treatment who are aggressively growing their own footprint. Previously, BRZ has not done supply contracts, but I think this path will only contribute to long-term stability.

We're also in discussions with the University of North Carolina, where chemists who have used BRZ zeolite to successfully capture both long-chain and short-chain PFAS, which you all know are forever chemicals, found almost everywhere that build up in the body and cause health problems over time. In general, expanding into modified zeolite has great potential in our growth objective that could open up untapped areas of water treatment for us. We'd also like to explore zeolite installations for nuclear remediation readiness, which is a use zeolite has historically demonstrated a strong and critically important performance. I think it's worth noting here that our production of material for Water Treatment applications naturally produces the majority of the material required for cattle feed operations, applications. That's the second priority.

Agricultural applications, specifically cattle nutrition and strengthening our operational capabilities so we can support larger bulk customers and ultimately increase our throughput. BRZ recently became the supplier to a significant cattle nutrition business, which essentially was an overnight transition. To support this new influx of cattle nutrition business, this meant that BRZ, which historically operated almost entirely under FOB shipping terms and provided packaged shipments, we began operating within a completely new logistical framework to support delivered pricing with bulk trucks filled by silos that our facility team was able to implement way ahead of what we had scheduled. In the coming months, as we support this transition toward more bulk-oriented business, we've begun implementing several practical infrastructure upgrades at the facility.

One of the key challenges ahead will be balancing this capital investment required to service these customers at scale and expand production with the demand we're beginning to see develop. We're approaching those decisions carefully to ensure that any capital expenditures are aligned with clear market demand and long-term value creation. From a production standpoint, as Gary mentioned earlier, we're very well positioned to support the growth. The deposit itself is very large and high quality, and operationally, the plant also has meaningful room to scale through work shift adjustments and perhaps some automation if we can get that in there. We're also evaluating a potential use of a regional transloading yard, which could allow us to stage product closer to clusters of customers, reduce delivery times, and expand the geographic areas where we can compete efficiently.

Last, our third priority has been increasing our visibility in the markets that we serve. BRZ has been working on this since about the end of 2024, and the market response to BRZ's increased exposure, honestly, even in the past couple of months, has been extremely encouraging. BRZ was a sponsor and exhibitor at a recent American Feed Industry Association conference, and I attended this with our agricultural sales manager, Jocelyn Mendez, who has a master's in dairy nutrition and spends most of her time around cattle. She previously worked for Diamond V, which is a Cargill company. For all three days of this conference, we were in back-to-back discussions with serious and enthusiastic buyers who are already setting additional meetings.

BRZ has done an enormous amount of work to iron out systems, equipment lines, implement HACCP programs and other validating licensing and certifications. The team's also done the work to zero in on where we need to take our bullhorn in the marketplace. In the past couple of months, I think that work is really starting to show results. We are excited about the foundation that's being built for future growth, and we look forward to being able to show the results. Thank you.

Gary C. Evans
Chairman and CEO, US Antimony Corporation

Melissa, I'm gonna put you on the spot here for a minute.

Melissa Pagen
President and COO, Bear River Zeolite

Okay.

Gary C. Evans
Chairman and CEO, US Antimony Corporation

I know you hate doing that.

Melissa Pagen
President and COO, Bear River Zeolite

Please don't.

Gary C. Evans
Chairman and CEO, US Antimony Corporation

I know that from some of the reports I've read that you've gotten, like, maybe four or five new customers since you came on in January.

Melissa Pagen
President and COO, Bear River Zeolite

Oh, it's.

Gary C. Evans
Chairman and CEO, US Antimony Corporation

And, uh-

Melissa Pagen
President and COO, Bear River Zeolite

Oh, yeah.

Gary C. Evans
Chairman and CEO, US Antimony Corporation

How many more?

Melissa Pagen
President and COO, Bear River Zeolite

It's gonna be more than that. Yeah.

Gary C. Evans
Chairman and CEO, US Antimony Corporation

I know. Okay.

Melissa Pagen
President and COO, Bear River Zeolite

It's gonna be more than that.

Gary C. Evans
Chairman and CEO, US Antimony Corporation

I've also seen not only new customers, I've also seen greater sales. I think what we're telling you as our investor public is that we're already seeing the results of the things that we've been working on to get new business. A lot of this business is from Fortune 100 companies. We're talking some of the biggest public companies and private companies in the business. This has been a sleeper asset for US Antimony for years, and we have all the ingredients together to really make this into a much bigger enterprise of US Antimony. If it gets big enough, we'll spin it off to our shareholders. That's the goal in the next, you know, two, three, four years. I'm very excited about what I see with the zeolite business.

We know we have really high quality material. It's an easy sell if you get in front of the right people with the right salespeople, and I think between Melissa and her team, they can do it. That's exciting for me. Let's now, before we turn it over to Jonathan Miller, who's our VP of Investor Relations, who helps me tremendously on the road and doing all the road shows we do, the investor conferences and presentations. One thing I did fail to mention in my opening comments is that we are now dual listed with our securities on both the New York Stock Exchange, Texas Exchange, it's called the TXSE Texas, as well as last week we were approved for an uplisting to the Big Board from the NYSE American to the Big Board of the exchange.

We've accomplished a lot of getting more visibility out to our institutional and retail investors, and Jonathan's gonna give you the overview of 2025. Jonathan.

Jonathan Miller
VP of Investor Relations, U.S. Antimony Corporation

Thank you, Gary. During 2025, we have successfully transformed United States Antimony's capital markets profile in the marketplace. We entered 2025 as a predominantly retail-driven micro-cap company. We exited the year as an institutionally sponsored critical minerals company with materially improved liquidity, valuation support, and market credibility. The results are clear. Our share price increased from $1.78- $5.02, a 182% gain. At the same time, market capitalization expanded from $201 million- $703 million, up 250%. From a financial standpoint, we delivered 160% revenue growth and increased total liquidity from $18 million to approximately $90 million, strengthening both the balance sheet and our strategic flexibility. The most important shift has been in ownership of our securities.

Institutional participation has scaled rapidly. Last year alone, me and Gary met with over 350 funds for one-on-one meetings. Based on the most recent Form 13F filings, we now have 222 institutional holders, up from just 48 in Q4 2024, with 91 new funds entering in Q4 alone. Importantly, this includes some of the most sophisticated investors globally, BlackRock, Vanguard, State Street, Two Sigma, Citadel, Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, and UBS, signaling that UAMY now meets the liquidity, governance, and risk thresholds required by larger institutional capital funds. To contrast that briefly, when me and Gary started marketing in July 2024, the majority of the funds we were meeting with averaged around $50 million-$200 million AUM. This is very different from where we came from.

As a result, institutional ownership has grown to approximately 40%, driving meaningful improvements in trading depths, price stability, liquidity, and overall market efficiency. We are now consistently trading around 15 million shares per day, enabling larger position sizing and more efficient price discovery. In parallel, our uplisting to the NYSE American just a week ago has expanded our visibility and eligibility across institutional mandates, further accelerating adoption. Just as important, we have successfully aligned our investor narrative with national security and domestic supply chain priorities, positioning US Antimony as a strategically relevant platform in critical minerals. That alignment has driven a clear market re-rating from a story-driven company to an execution-driven investment.

In short, we've built a significantly stronger capital markets foundation with a growing institutional shareholder base, improved liquidity and trading efficiency, expanded research coverage and investor access, and enhanced flexibility to support future growth and strategic initiatives. We believe this positioning will continue to drive long-term shareholder value as we continue to execute on our operational and strategic priorities. Our marketing and public relations strategy continues to evolve. Many of you may have recently seen our television campaigns across leading news and business networks, both linear and streaming. These efforts are designed to elevate awareness across the strategic importance of domestic critical mineral production, particularly antimony, and our significant role in that space, and position that conversation within the broader national and economic dialogue. We're no longer just introducing our story. We're now scaling institutional ownership along well-thought-out execution on many different fronts. Back to you, Gary.

Gary C. Evans
Chairman and CEO, US Antimony Corporation

Thank you, Jonathan. That was so good, I think I may go buy some stock. Let's see. Before we go into our question from callers, I'd like to give you just kind of a little thumbnail overview of what you as an investor should expect from this company in fiscal 2026. Obviously, we're two and a half months into that, but I wanna give you some things to just go home with. Number one, we will always maintain solid financial footing. What that means is we will have minimal, if any, debt, and we'll have cash or cash equivalents on our balance sheet. I am adamant that this business, being the mining business, needs to have only equity and very little debt. You're gonna see more government funding.

We have a new gentleman that we hired about four months ago in D.C. that is helping us tremendously with the various pockets of the U.S. federal government that has money available. I don't think it's appropriate for me to tell you all the things we have done, but I will tell you right now, we have filings in with the government for new funding on new projects. We have another one going out. If it didn't go out today, it's going out tomorrow. We have others planned over the next few weeks.

We are hitting various divisions of the U.S. government 'cause we think with our credibility now in the marketplace, with the projects that we have got going on, with the funding we've already received, we received a $27 million award a couple weeks ago related to our Thompson Falls expansion, that we're well suited to go obtain additional funding, not only for antimony, but for tungsten and other critical minerals. Let's talk about Thompson Falls expansion. As you know, we began that expansion in May of last year. We thought it would be done in December, January. I'm telling you today, it's now not gonna be done till May. Why? Why is it that we're five months behind schedule? It is primarily due to delays from suppliers and third parties that we have no control over.

Our main third-party delays has been our general contractor, who was over a month late in designing our concrete pad. We had to build a concrete pad there on that location that would withstand earthquakes from California. If you went and witnessed it's like a bomb shelter. We also had delays from the contractor that was erecting our building, and part of that had to do with weather. Obviously, we've been building this facility in the middle of winter. The last item was our heat exchangers. Our heat exchangers come from a major equipment supplier, and they were always running a couple of months late. Now they've been running, you know, longer than four months late.

We are on the phone talking to them all the time and obviously can't do anything about a third party being delinquent in delivering their equipment, but that's the case. If you think about what we've done, this is a substantial expansion that we've done in a year. We got the permits, we got the construction, and we're down to the 90-yard line. There's work going on every day. We have weekly updates, and so we don't anticipate seeing any financial results in the first quarter of 2026 related to the expansion of Thompson Falls. The other thing I'd like to make note of is we're in a business that's volatile. Obviously, antimony prices have moved up, they've moved down, they've come and coming back up again.

We buy antimony from six different countries today, and if you look at our financial statements at year-end, you'll see the highest amount of inventory this company has ever had. That should give you comfort that we now have the inventory to start meeting some of the contractual obligations of the DLA. As I mentioned, we're getting ready to make our first shipment to them. When you look at the financials in 2026, they're gonna be bumpy. There's gonna be quarters you go, "Oh, that looks like not so good." There's gonna be quarters like, "Wow, they blew it out of the park." You gotta look at the whole year. We are very firm on our guidance of $125 million. We know how much we'll be delivering to the DLA.

We have material in hand, material on the water. We now have our own mine in Montana. The future estimates of giving financial guidance will be a lot more solid going forward. I'm telling you, it's gonna be bumpy in 2026. There'll be quarters that'll be lower, and there'll be quarters that are gonna be much higher. That we can't do anything about. When you look at the overall effect of 2026, it's gonna be right where you think it will be. The other thing that I want to mention is that we're continuing to advance and look at other critical minerals. You're not aware of what those are. We have a lot of meetings, a lot of discussions with the government and without the government of what they're looking for.

The beauty of this mining business is, and the people that we have involved in our Board and our management team, is they know where the crown jewels are hidden. We get invites to look at things almost every day. We're looking at new projects, new areas. The one thing that is a major characteristic of what we will and will not look at is time, speed. We will not look at something that'll take two years or three years. It's gotta be now. When you see us do a project just like the one we just bought in Alaska, we bought that in a trustee sale a month and a half ago for $1.3 million, and we're gonna be mining on it probably within two to three months. That is unheard of.

We're moving as fast as humanly possible to get these things to the point of where you, as a shareholder, can realize the value through our financial statements. With that, I'd like to answer some questions I got from a couple shareholders before we go to our listeners out there, and these are, I think, some pretty good questions. The first one is, the Thompson Falls expansion was originally estimated in January. Well, obviously, I just described that's gonna be May now, and I explained why. The USAS agreement, that's the Americas Gold and Silver agreement. When will that ore be flowing? Just to give you an idea, we didn't really talk about this today, but we signed a joint venture agreement about a month and a half ago with Americas Gold and Silver, symbol is USAS.

That is a joint venture to build a new hydromet facility on land that they've donated to joint venture that's fully permitted in Idaho, where they have three silver mines ongoing, where we will process their antimony. We already process their antimony today. It goes up to a plant in Canada, and then we get the residual product that we handle there in Thompson Falls. That's our primary source of antimony today is through United States or through this company in Canada. What we'll be doing is building a hydromet to process that antimony right there on site. We are in the planning stage, the budgeting stage, the engineering stage.

In fact, there's a whole group of us both from Americas Gold and Silver and United States Antimony going to Bolivia at the end of the month to look at our commercial-grade hydromet facility we financed that's bringing us now 150 tons a month of antimony flake that will go into our smelter. We're looking at the facility we funded to make it a commercial scale because we're gonna be duplicating that facility on a larger scale in Idaho. That's with our partners at Americas Gold and Silver. We have a lot of meetings on that. We're very excited. Since we've announced that joint venture, which will be the largest hydromet facility in North America, we're getting calls from other antimony producers or producers that wanna be. They wanna bring their material to us.

We are looking at most likely having different phases of that project, phase one, phase two, phase three, to expand it. Another question is the tungsten deposit. What is the strategy to develop this resource? Given the size and potential cost of developing the project, are you planning on bringing in a joint venture partner? The answer is no. This is an open pit mine, which allows us to do things a lot quicker, a lot easier, and a lot cheaper. Joe and his team have got a plan, and our goal is to try to get that tungsten deposit to an existing refinery as soon as possible. We are making an application with the U.S. government to fund that project. Do we have the ability to develop it in-house? Absolutely.

Can we process low quality ore at the new Hydromet facility? Absolutely. That's the whole idea behind Hydromet, is we can take much lower quality antimony, much lower concentration levels into that facility. It's something we couldn't do in our existing gas smelters. There was also a question about Radersburg. That's our flotation facility, our concentrate mill in Radersburg, Montana. Will the Hydromet material need to go there? Answer is no. We will just go right into Hydromet. The Radersburg is gonna be handling like most of the Montana material. That's where that material is sitting today, waiting to be processed. Our vice president of our antimony division is in the process of upgrading that. I think as we mentioned when we bought that a few months ago, that should be up and running soon.

Those are some questions that should help our audience. Now, operator, if you don't mind turning over to our first outside listener.

Operator

Certainly. At this time, we will be conducting a question -and -answer session. You can submit a question at this time by clicking the Ask Question button on the left of your screen. Type your question into the box and hit the Send button to submit your question. One moment, please, while we pull for questions. The first question is: With elevated inventory, expected ramp of Montana Mining, and expanded smelting capacity, how do you see the production mix evolving over the next 12-18 months, particularly as you see Alaska's potentials growing into the heart of your future mining ops? And how will you see your planned mix meet your existing government and offtake commitments?

Gary C. Evans
Chairman and CEO, US Antimony Corporation

Okay. That's a kind of a long-winded question, but I'll see if I can answer it. First of all, we would love to be mining all of our own antimony. Why? That's the cheapest antimony we could ever find on planet Earth. We think we can mine it for less than $5 a pound, where we're buying it today for maybe $8, $9, $10 a pound. We were buying it for $15-$18 a pound a few months ago. Having that low cost of ore is so important to guaranteeing your profit margins. More than that, it also gives you reliability. I can't tell you how many times over the past year a transload was delayed or, you know, getting it, the ore to the port was delayed or there was customs delay.

We had material confiscated by the Chinese government for 6 months. I mean, there's always something. A lot of this antimony doesn't come from the most, you know, friendly countries. Having more control of our destiny with our own material is where we wanna be. We'll accomplish that not only with the mine in Montana, the activities we have in Alaska. When the Hydromet facility comes online, that material all comes to us. It still has to be processed in our furnaces. That will give us a significant surety, and we hope to have that up and running in about the next year to year and a half. That will have a significant impact on our future.

Today, we are still getting 100% of our antimony from foreign sources. That will change soon as the material we took from Montana is processed in Radersburg, which should be over the next month or two. Then that mine will open back up. Weather fortunately, the weather in Montana was much milder in 2025, 2026. The weather in Alaska was much colder. Alaska may be delayed May, June, but Montana could be open the next three weeks. We're anxious to get back up on the mountain and get back to doing what we were doing last year so successfully. Next question.

Operator

You mentioned that you're facing four-month delays on an equipment supplier. Are you able to switch, evaluate other vendors to try to avoid equipment delays? Are there options available?

Gary C. Evans
Chairman and CEO, US Antimony Corporation

Unfortunately not. This is very specialized equipment that was ordered from these particular contractors, and we obviously tried to stay with only U.S. contractors. The answer is no. We have to wait till they deliver.

Operator

Can you give us an update on the magnitude of ore shipments from Alaska? How many tons of ore output could you ramp up to, and how does this translate to finished pounds?

Gary C. Evans
Chairman and CEO, US Antimony Corporation

Good question. I don't have an answer yet, but I will tell you what my geologist says. I'm gonna hold him to it. He says, "We're gonna have you, Gary, 1,000 tons a month." Well, I'm saying that I'll be happy with 200 tons a month. We'll know a whole lot more what's gonna come out of Alaska, obviously, by summer, fall. We won't know in the early part of the year. These properties I just mentioned that we bought in the trustee sale that Joe gave further information on really has a lot of antimony on the ground. It's visible. The veins are visible. We're gonna try to hit that first. We've already filed permits for it.

You know, the goal is to get as much of that into a ll that material will go to Radersburg, so it'll be processed just like the Montana material. It's a higher concentrate of stibnite, maybe 40%-60%. Joe, you can correct me if I'm wrong. I think the Montana material is a mere 10%. It's higher quality from the standpoint of concentration.

Operator

Okay.

Gary C. Evans
Chairman and CEO, US Antimony Corporation

Next question.

Operator

The next question says: Hi, Gary. With the U.S. government in need of refills on munitions, have there been any talks between you guys and defense firms and/or the U.S. government about supporting them at this time to replenish those supplies? Thank you.

Gary C. Evans
Chairman and CEO, US Antimony Corporation

We're already supporting them. That's the $248 million contract we won on September of last year. There are discussions always ongoing. We keep a very high dialogue going on at any given time with senators, house members, governors, and as I mentioned before, General Keane is on our Board, so we kinda hear what's going on. There's a lot of need for additional munitions, as everybody knows, with the activities we'd had in Venezuela and now Iran. It's not just us, it's NATO countries as well. No question that the demand for what we do is going up, and I think it's likely that you'll see some additional needs coming from the government to us.

Operator

The next question is.

Gary C. Evans
Chairman and CEO, US Antimony Corporation

Next.

Operator

Can you give us a sense for the progress at Thompson Falls in terms of the expansion? How much of the expansion is left to complete? How does this translate to shipments throughout the balance of 2026? Thank you very much.

Gary C. Evans
Chairman and CEO, US Antimony Corporation

Yeah, I think I've already answered that question. Again, the expansion is gonna be completed in May, so we're still about almost two months away from that, all due to delay of equipment. There's work going on there every day, though. I mean, I talked to our VP Mechanical Engineer who's in charge of the expansion, and we're on top of it. We don't want to shut down our existing smelter until this one is ready to go, because we are gonna do some improvements in the existing smelter to improve its efficiency. It's also important to note that once we start receiving the Bolivian material, which should be the next 30-45 days. That allows us to process much more material than numbers we've given you.

In other words, if we get 150 tons a month out of Bolivia, it's 90% concentrate. What that means is it doesn't have to spend nearly as much time in those smelters to make metal ingots for the DLA. We're really excited about that. Of course, that will be the same case when we complete the JV with Americas Gold and Silver, building that hydromet facility. That facility will give us 90% antimony flake that will go into our furnaces. What it enables us to do is run a whole lot more material than lower grade antimony. That's another reason we're very excited about the hydromet process.

Operator

What is your appetite for M&A at this time? Do you see other opportunities in the public markets, or do you remain focused on project-level opportunities?

Gary C. Evans
Chairman and CEO, US Antimony Corporation

It's a good question. We look at both. We haven't seen anything on the M&A front that has really appealed to us. It, you know, it'd have to be a company that is growing at the speed we're growing. I mean, we just reported today just under $40 million in revenues, and we're going to triple that in 2026. It's hard to find another company that has the kind of growth that we have that would make an M&A attraction. Now, we are looking at companies that have maybe specific critical minerals that are closer to coming to fruition, where we might help fund them, we might become a joint venture partner, we might become a shareholder. We might, you know, do something to help them expedite what they're doing. We look at those all the time.

I looked at two this week, in fact, and the problem with most of them is that they're still three years, four years away. We're not willing to look that far out. It's got to be within a year to two years for us to really get excited about it, 'cause we're on a much faster track than most companies.

Operator

Does UAMY currently have contracts with battery making facilities?

Gary C. Evans
Chairman and CEO, US Antimony Corporation

We do not have any long-term contracts, but those discussions are ongoing.

Operator

What is your plan for Larvotto Resources, a company whom you purchased 50 million shares of?

Gary C. Evans
Chairman and CEO, US Antimony Corporation

Yes. We're the largest shareholder of Larvotto, an Australian miner. It's called the Hillgrove Mine. It's not up in operations yet. I think it's also been delayed, probably more like a July, August event. We have investment bankers that are consulting with us on Larvotto. We have not yet made a decision on what we're gonna do there. At this point, it's just an investment.

Operator

What are your thoughts on the current macro environment and potential supply shocks that could occur if trade tensions flare up more between the U.S. and China?

Gary C. Evans
Chairman and CEO, US Antimony Corporation

Remember, China has already cut off all shipments of antimony. They did that in September of 2024. They also cut off all shipments of tungsten at the same time. I don't think anything that we're doing with China one way or another is gonna affect our business. It's already been affected. Now are we seeing leakage out of China of antimony going into Malaysia or Indonesia, Vietnam, South Korea? Possibly. We've also seen some of that get cut off. China is doing its best trying to make sure the antimony does not leak out of their country. And there still is a worldwide shortage of antimony, no doubt about it. While prices escalated from $5- $30, came back down to $12, $14, $16, they're still up significantly from where we were three years ago.

Our contracts, you know, protect us to a large degree. We feel good about the business and we want to be a major force of controlling 25%-50% of U.S. antimony needs, and that's where we're going with our hydromet facilities and our own mining operations.

Operator

Very interesting. Having used BRZ in challenging filtration projects, I think that has tremendous potential for growth.

Gary C. Evans
Chairman and CEO, US Antimony Corporation

Is that a question or a statement?

Melissa Pagen
President and COO, Bear River Zeolite

It was a statement. I love it.

Operator

Yes.

Gary C. Evans
Chairman and CEO, US Antimony Corporation

There you go. Melissa, you got your marching orders.

Melissa Pagen
President and COO, Bear River Zeolite

I love it. Yeah. Thank you. I'm inspired.

Operator

Okay. Our next question comes, let's see here, is: How has the price of antimony and zeolite moved over the past 12-18 months? What does the investment into the Australian company mean to you?

Gary C. Evans
Chairman and CEO, US Antimony Corporation

Okay. Well, I'll answer the last question first, and then I'll answer the first question. We made the investment in Larvotto because we had the intent at the time of taking over the company. We made an offer for the company, it was an all-stock offer, and that was rejected. We have done nothing since that occurred. Now, there were some reasons that we have done nothing. There are some Australian laws concerning when a company tenders for stock in the open market, there are certain restrictions. Those restrictions have all expired. They expired mostly in February, and so our hands are no longer tied as related to what we want to do. We have highly qualified bankers helping us make decisions there. We don't think there's a gun at our head making us make any decision right now.

We're looking at the overall situation, and we're gonna do what we think is the very best thing for our shareholders, and that is what our board and what our management team is incentivized to do. Will something happen with Larvotto? Maybe. That's a lot of it's gonna be dependent upon their management and their board of what they do and don't wanna do. If we can't come to an agreement of the minds, then we'll sell our stock position. Simple as that. With respect to the other question, remind me what it was.

Operator

Oh, it looks like it was removed from the queue.

Gary C. Evans
Chairman and CEO, US Antimony Corporation

Do you remember what it was, Melissa?

Melissa Pagen
President and COO, Bear River Zeolite

Sorry, I don't.

Gary C. Evans
Chairman and CEO, US Antimony Corporation

Yeah, I don't either.

Melissa Pagen
President and COO, Bear River Zeolite

I'm looking for the.

Gary C. Evans
Chairman and CEO, US Antimony Corporation

We'll just have to go.

Melissa Pagen
President and COO, Bear River Zeolite

I'm looking for the zeolite question to save.

Gary C. Evans
Chairman and CEO, US Antimony Corporation

I think it had to do with growth of zeolite. We did have growth in sales and pricing with respect to zeolite went up a little bit. If you look at our antimony sales in 2025, they were pretty flat. The real growth was in price. As I've told new investors that have been coming to our stock, that's gonna change in 2026. It's mostly gonna be volume related. The growth will all be volume, not price. We have a significant ramp up coming. As I said, it's gonna be bumpy, but I feel really good about where we'll be by the end of the year.

Melissa Pagen
President and COO, Bear River Zeolite

This isn't a price answer on the zeolite, but I can say with this influx of this new bulk business, it certainly changes the margins because the bulk product is a much lower cost for us. While we're not increasing the prices, we'll still make much better margin on that.

Gary C. Evans
Chairman and CEO, US Antimony Corporation

Operator, I think we'll take one more question 'cause it's been right at an hour. Okay?

Operator

Certainly. What is the status regarding the cobalt property?

Gary C. Evans
Chairman and CEO, US Antimony Corporation

The cobalt property, as Joe Bardswich outlined, we did enough work on it to recognize that we need to make some other changes. For competitive reasons, I'd really not rather speak as to what we're gonna do, but we do have plans there, and once we get those plans completed, we'll be happy to voice them. It is not nearly as far along as the tungsten property. Obviously, the tungsten property, we have a resource report. As I said, we'll be filing that next week with SEC. You know, shows future revenues of $4.6 billion. That is a real high priority of getting that property up and running. We hope that to be the very first tungsten property in operation in 12 years in North America, and that's something badly needed by our government.

Tungsten's necessary for tanks and for submarines. It's the second hardest mineral behind diamonds. If you go to Home Depot and buy a drill bit, that's a tungsten drill bit. We're very excited about where that stands. We are looking at other tungsten opportunities. We're trying to beef up that area of our company. We tried to bid on one last year. We were beat out by another company. We just weren't willing to pay the price they paid. We are very frugal. We're not gonna buy something just to buy it. It's gotta be priced right and under the radar for us to be interested.

Operator

Thank you. We have reached the end of the question -and -answer session, and I will now turn the call over to management for closing remarks.

Gary C. Evans
Chairman and CEO, US Antimony Corporation

We had a great year. Gonna have another great year in 2026. We thank all of you for being investors in our company. Hopefully you did well in the stock, but you're gonna do a whole lot better in the future years, I think. We have a lot of irons in the fire, as you heard today, and we have to execute. You can see that we've executed in the past, and we plan to execute in the future. It's a matter of bolting on and building this organization to something that all of you can be very proud of. We have a unique relationship with the U.S. government as the only antimony supplier. We are sole source contract under our DLA, and now we're gonna expand that even further.

We are in a perfect position as being a first mover to capture a lot more business, and that's what we're after today. Thank you very much for your time, and we look forward to communicating with you again in the future.

Operator

This concludes today's conference, and you may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.

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