Lynas Rare Earths stock near A$18 as G7 minerals pricing debate keeps ASX rare earths in focus

Lynas Rare Earths stock near A$18 as G7 minerals pricing debate keeps ASX rare earths in focus

June 17, 2026

Sydney, June 17, 2026, 09:03 (AEST)

  • Lynas last traded at A$17.98 on Tuesday, up 0.56%, while the S&P/ASX 200 closed almost flat at 8,917.70.
  • Investors are weighing Western efforts to cut China reliance in critical minerals, with G7 talks exposing splits over price supports and governance.
  • Pol Le Roux is due to become interim CEO from June 30, replacing Amanda Lacaze after 12 years at the helm.

Lynas Rare Earths shares were set to open near A$18 on Wednesday after edging higher in the previous session, with the rare earths producer still caught in a wider market debate over how far Western governments should go to support non-China supply.

The stock last traded at A$17.98 on Tuesday, up 0.56%, against a 0.04% gain for the S&P/ASX 200. The Australian market had not yet opened at the time of publication; normal ASX trading runs from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sydney time.

The issue matters now because rare earths have moved from a niche mining trade to a policy trade. The metals are used in magnets, defence equipment, chips and electric vehicles, and Western buyers are trying to cut reliance on China, which still dominates processing and pricing.

Reuters reported this week that the Trump administration’s push for a Western critical-minerals trading bloc is meeting resistance from G7 allies and parts of the mining industry. The plan could include price supports, subsidies, guaranteed purchases and tariffs, but talks are stuck on who pays, who governs the system, and how prices are set.

That debate goes directly to Lynas’ investment case. The company is the largest rare earths producer outside China and has already secured U.S. and Japanese supply arrangements that help shelter part of its output from China-linked spot prices.

Amanda Lacaze, Lynas’ outgoing chief executive, said in May that U.S. and European rules were already shifting buying patterns. “In both cases, we are observing changed purchasing decisions,” she said, referring to customers seeking to comply with sourcing rules. Reuters

Lynas’ latest operating update also gave the market something concrete to price. Third-quarter gross sales revenue more than doubled to A$265 million, its highest since the final quarter of fiscal 2022, helped by stronger prices and a better product mix. NdPr, short for neodymium-praseodymium, is a rare-earth magnet material used in high-performance permanent magnets.

The company’s leadership shift remains a live overhang, though not a surprise. Lynas said Pol Le Roux, its chief operating officer, will take over as interim CEO from June 30. Chairman John Humphrey said Le Roux had “extensive knowledge” of Lynas’ operations and the rare earths market. Reuters

Peers are moving around the same policy theme. MP Materials has received a U.S. financial backstop for rare earths, while Lynas and Brazil’s Serra Verde have U.S. government offtake deals, Reuters reported. An offtake is a supply contract under which a buyer agrees to purchase future production, often giving a miner more revenue certainty.

Arafura Rare Earths, another Australian name in the sector, has warned that Germany and South Korea could be exposed as the U.S. and Japan lock up supply, Reuters reported in March. That adds some competitive tension: Lynas is already producing at scale, while developers such as Arafura are still racing to finance and build capacity.

But the trade is not clean. Price floors can support miners, yet they can also invite political pushback, budget fights and delays. Ashley Zumwalt-Forbes, a former U.S. Department of Energy critical minerals official, called the pricing task “a very hard thing to do,” while Wood Mackenzie analyst James Willoughby saw “a very mixed message” from U.S. policy. Reuters

For Lynas, the next move will likely depend less on one day’s ASX tape and more on whether governments turn policy talk into bankable contracts. Without that, investors are still left with the old rare-earth problem: prices can rise fast when China supply is disrupted, and fall just as quickly when buyers step back.

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