Introducing Mining Terminal
The terminal for mining. Drill results, resource estimates, project economics, ownership, permits, news, and live prices, indexed from source filings and cited line by line.
Introducing Mining Terminal
Summary box
- Mining Terminal indexes the global mining universe from source filings, not secondhand summaries.
- Drill results, resource estimates, project economics, ownership, permits, news, and live prices live in one place.
- Every number is traceable to the document it came from, cited line by line.
- Nara, the AI analyst, lets you query the whole corpus in plain English.
- Built for research desks, fund managers, deal teams, and operators who need the answer in minutes.
Last updated: 2026-05-28
Mining runs on documents. Technical reports, financial statements, news releases, permit dockets. The numbers that move a stock are buried across thousands of pages, in dozens of formats, filed to a dozen regulators. Finding them by hand is slow, and checking them twice is slower.
Mining Terminal exists to fix that. It is the terminal for mining: a single, sourced view of the companies, projects, and commodities that make up the sector.
What it is
We index the global mining universe directly from source filings. Drill intercepts, resource and reserve estimates, project economics, production history, ownership, permits, news, and live prices are extracted, structured, and linked back to the exact document and section they came from.
That last part matters. Every figure on the platform is traceable. When you read an NPV, an AISC, or a grade, you can see the filing behind it. No black box, no orphaned data point.
Start with the company universe on stocks, drill into individual assets on projects, or read more about the platform on the terminal page.
Built from filings, not summaries
Most data products in this space repackage what someone else already summarized. We work from the primary sources: NI 43-101 and JORC technical reports, 10-Ks, MD&A, prospectuses, and press releases. Each one is parsed into structured fields and graded for quality before it reaches the platform.
The result is depth you can actually verify. A resource estimate carries its tonnage, grade, category, and the report it was published in. A feasibility study carries its capex, IRR, and metal price assumptions. The work of reading the document is done, but the document is still right there when you need it.
Ask in plain English with Nara
You should not need to know a query language to find a number. Nara, the AI analyst, sits on top of the full corpus and answers questions the way you would ask a colleague. Compare AISC across a peer group. Pull every project at a given stage in a given jurisdiction. Check what a company said about guidance in its last filing.
Nara reads the filings so you do not have to, and it shows its work. Answers come back with the underlying data and the source behind it.
Who it is for
Mining Terminal is built for people who live in the data:
- Research desks that need every number sourced and need it fast.
- Fund managers making calls on new projects, asset updates, and commodity shifts without waiting on a manual trawl.
- Deal teams screening hundreds of assets across jurisdictions, where missing a single filing during diligence is not an option.
- Engineers and operators benchmarking recovery, throughput, AISC, and grade against comparable assets.
Where we go from here
This is the start. Coverage deepens as more filings are indexed, and the structured data underneath gets richer with every pass. We will keep writing here about what we are building, what the data shows, and how to get more out of the platform.
Take a look around stocks and projects, and put a question to Nara. If something is missing or wrong, tell us. The whole point is to be the source you can trust.