Sydney, June 8, 2026, 06:02 (AEST)
- ASX trading is shut Monday for King’s Birthday. Ramelius ended at A$3.05 on Friday, off 3.17%.
- RMS dropped 5.28% for the week and is down 10.82% in the past month. Spot gold lost around 4.3% for the week.
- Deputy Chair Simon Lawson stepped down effective June 5, putting a board move into play when trading resumed Tuesday.
Ramelius Resources will miss Monday’s Australian session after shares dropped on Friday. A steep slide in gold and a last-minute board resignation pushed the Western Australian miner into the spotlight heading into the next round of trading.
ASX said the share market will be shut Monday, June 8, for King’s Birthday. There won’t be settlement or a business day. Ramelius last closed at A$3.05 on Friday and that price will hang until trading picks up in the shortened week.
This matters for Ramelius, since Ramelius is a gold producer. Gold shares can swing when bullion prices change. Bullion is physical gold, traded as a commodity. For gold miners, bullion prices go straight into revenue, margins, and what investors are willing to pay.
Gold prices dropped 2.96% to $4,341.52 an ounce on Friday and lost about 4.3% this week after U.S. jobs data came in above forecasts, sending bond yields higher, Reuters said. “The cost of carry is getting quite high,” TD Securities’ Bart Melek said, pointing to the lack of yield and costs involved in holding gold. Reuters
Gold stocks fell on Friday with Ramelius Resources off 3.17%. Other miners dropped too: Evolution Mining slipped 3.06%, Westgold Resources fell 4.12% and Resolute Mining lost 5.02%, according to Trading Economics. The ASX 200 was down 0.70% for the day.
Ramelius said Simon Lawson has quit as deputy chair and non-executive director, stepping down June 5, S&P Capital IQ reported via MarketScreener. Lawson is leaving to pursue other interests. A non-executive director sits on the board but does not handle daily operations.
Simon Lawson joined Ramelius’ board on July 31, 2025, after Spartan Resources combined with the company, according to the same report. Ramelius calls the deal a A$2.4 billion merger and says it brought Dalgaranga, Never Never and Pepper into the company, with ore from Never Never starting to feed the Mt Magnet mill in February 2026.
Production is still in focus. Ramelius lists Mt Magnet and Edna May as its main hubs in Western Australia and holds the Rebecca-Roe project in development. The company is targeting more than 500,000 ounces in annual output by 2030.
Asian demand stayed soft for the metal. Bernard Sin, regional director for Greater China at MKS PAMP, told Reuters, “Physical demand in China has been somewhat subdued recently.” Indian dealers were selling at discounts as high local prices slowed buying. Reuters
The week ahead is short but could matter. With markets closed Monday, Tuesday’s open will tell if investors see the gold drop as just a quick markdown or the beginning of a bigger reset for Australian gold stocks.
But the impact can go both ways. If bond yields drop, the U.S. dollar softens or safe-haven demand picks up, gold could rise and help Ramelius. On the other hand, if bullion slips, trading stays thin over the holidays, or worries grow about integration or mining, pressure could return.
A$3.05 is where things stood last. The price isn’t a disaster, but a 5.28% drop this week and a board change after the bell mean traders will be watching the first hour on Tuesday.