PLS Group stock falls 9.8% in week as miner commits A$175 million to Pilgangoora expansion

PLS Group stock falls 9.8% in week as miner commits A$175 million to Pilgangoora expansion

June 19, 2026

Perth, June 20, 2026, 03:05 (AWST)

  • PLS ended Friday at A$5.88, down 4.7% for the session and 9.8% from the previous week’s close.
  • The company approved about A$175 million of early expenditure on its proposed P2000 lithium expansion.
  • The Australian Securities Exchange is closed for the weekend, with normal trading due to resume Monday.

PLS Group shares closed 4.7% lower on Friday as investors weighed a fresh capital commitment against a broad retreat in Australian mining stocks. The stock finished at A$5.88 while the materials sector led the wider market lower.

The A$175 million is pre-final investment decision expenditure, or money committed before the board formally approves full construction. PLS said the work would preserve the timetable for P2000, which could lift Pilgangoora’s capacity to about 2 million tonnes a year of spodumene concentrate, the lithium-rich material sold to chemical processors.

A feasibility study and possible final investment decision are due in the December quarter, with first ore targeted for mid-2029. “This pre-FID capital expenditure preserves optionality and maintains momentum along the critical path,” Chief Executive Dale Henderson said. PLS

PLS traded between A$5.77 and A$6.10 on Friday. Turnover reached about 39.1 million shares, above its three-month average of 31.3 million. The close was 9.8% below the A$6.52 recorded on the previous Friday.

The S&P/ASX 200 dropped 0.92% to 8,828.7 on Friday but still eked out a gain of less than 0.3% for the week. Moomoo market strategist Michael McCarthy described the session as “not a panic, but rather a buyers’ strike on the day.” PLS’s much steeper weekly decline shows how quickly lithium exposure can amplify a weaker mining tape. Morningstar

PLS plans to direct about A$100 million to plant procurement and engineering, A$60 million to on-site preparation and A$15 million to road infrastructure during fiscal 2027. The early orders could prevent equipment delays, but they also move cash out before the project’s final economics are known.

The cheque is material, though not balance-sheet-breaking. It equals roughly 12% of PLS’s A$1.455 billion cash balance at March 31. In that quarter, the company produced a record 232,436 tonnes, lifted revenue 52% to A$567 million and cut operating costs before freight and royalties by 11% to A$520 a tonne.

The weakness was not confined to PLS. Rival Liontown fell 2.9% to A$1.98 on Friday, while a yuan-denominated lithium benchmark was down 10.3% over the month through Thursday. Those moves leave near-term earnings expectations exposed to another commodity-price reversal.

But P2000 can still be mistimed. Higher prices may bring idled supply back into production, while the possible restart of CATL’s large Jianxiawo mine remains a major swing factor. Benchmark Mineral Intelligence expects a material lithium-price decline in the second half, while BNP Paribas and Citi have also warned that supply growth could undermine the rebound.

When trading resumes, investors will look for signs that PLS can stabilise after two heavy sessions and that lithium prices have found support. The larger question will remain: whether preserving a 2029 expansion timetable is worth committing capital now, before the next turn in the lithium cycle is clear.

Mateusz Ługowik

Mateusz Ługowik is a senior markets reporter at Bez-kabli.pl, specializing in technology stocks, artificial intelligence and global financial markets. A graduate of the University of Gdańsk, he previously worked in investment research and market analysis. His coverage helps readers understand the key trends, companies and innovations influencing investors worldwide.

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