The final week of June is shaping up as a make-or-break moment for Green Bridge Metals, with a triple set of events that could redirect the trajectory of this junior explorer. Washington is poised to rule on copper tariffs, the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources is weighing a key permit, and the market is still waiting on the last batch of assays from the company’s Phase 1 drilling program. Investors accustomed to annualized volatility of 69 percent will be watching closely — the stock closed at €0.11 on Friday, some 54 percent below its February peak of €0.23 and with a relative strength index of 37.3, teetering on oversold territory.
The most consequential variable may come from the White House. By June 30, the US Commerce Secretary must present President Trump with a recommendation on tariffs for refined copper — the most actively traded form of the metal. A 50-percent levy on semi-finished copper products has already been in place since April 6, 2026, and a subsequent proclamation on June 1 extended the tariff regime on aluminium, steel and copper through the end of 2027. Refined copper remains the missing piece. The market is already positioning: first-quarter US copper imports doubled to 533,000 tonnes as traders built inventories in anticipation of a potential 15-percent universal duty starting in 2027.
For Green Bridge, this is no distant macro story. Its assets sit squarely in Minnesota’s Duluth Complex, a region that stands to benefit directly from Washington’s push to secure domestic supply chains for critical minerals. The administration has already lifted a decades-old mining ban in the Superior National Forest and established a strategic reserve programme offering credit lines of up to $10 billion for domestic developers — moves that cut through regulatory red tape for junior explorers like Green Bridge.
At the same time, the company is drilling for answers at its Titac South project. Six diamond-core holes were completed in Phase 1, with three already returning broad copper intervals. Hole TS26-005 intersected 152 metres at 0.31 percent copper, plus 13.7 percent titanium dioxide and 0.15 percent vanadium oxide. Hole TS26-003 yielded 190 metres at 0.30 percent copper, including a 14-metre section grading 0.48 percent. The remaining three assays are yet to be disclosed. One of those is a step-out hole targeting a geophysical anomaly that has never been tested — a positive result could significantly widen the known mineralised zone. Further encouragement comes from a full 3D inversion of airborne VTEM data, which flagged four to five additional untested anomalies with matching conductivity and magnetic signatures.
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A separate catalyst revolves around the Serpentine project, where the DNR is reviewing the exploration plan and is expected to deliver a decision before the end of June. Serpentine already hosts an inferred resource of roughly 280 million tonnes at 0.37 percent copper and 0.12 percent nickel, plus an indicated resource of 21.6 million tonnes at 0.46 percent copper. If the permit is granted, Green Bridge plans a Phase 1 drill programme in the second half of 2026 involving six to ten holes totalling 2,000 to 2,500 metres. The programme will also test for cobalt and platinum-group elements, with a preliminary economic assessment targeted within 18 months of drilling.
The company has the financial firepower to see these plans through. With roughly C$4 million in the bank, management expects to fully fund all scheduled drilling in Minnesota and Ontario until the end of 2026, removing the immediate need for a dilutive equity raise. Despite the stock’s recent slide, the year-to-date return still stands at about 65 percent — a reminder that for a thinly traded explorer, even a single positive catalyst can generate outsized moves.
All three data points — the copper tariff ruling from Washington, the Titac South assays, and the Serpentine permit — land within days of each other. Whether they lift the stock back toward its highs or accelerate the decline depends on what the assays, the regulators and the White House actually deliver. For Green Bridge, the countdown is on.
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