SYDNEY, May 18, 2026, 04:05 (AEST)
- Lynas last traded at A$17.95 on Friday, flat on the day but down about 7.7% from the previous Friday’s close.
- The S&P/ASX 200 ended Friday at 8,630.8, down roughly 1.3% for the week.
- Rare-earth supply risk remains the main sector driver as China’s export controls continue to hit some heavy rare-earth shipments.
Lynas Rare Earths heads into Monday’s ASX session under pressure after a sharp late-week selloff, even as fresh global deal activity keeps investors focused on non-China rare-earth supply. The ASX cash market was still closed at the dateline; normal trading in Sydney runs from 09:59:45 to 16:00.
The stock closed at A$17.95 on Friday, unchanged on the day after touching A$17.77, with 4.20 million shares traded. Its heavier move came on Thursday, when it fell 9.8%, leaving the week’s loss well ahead of the broader market’s decline.
The reason the move matters now is not just the chart. Rare earths — a group of metals used in powerful magnets, electronics, defence systems and electric vehicles — remain a trade-policy flashpoint, and Lynas is one of the few listed producers investors use as a proxy for supply outside China.
Reuters reported last week that China and the United States were considering extending a rare-earth truce, but Chinese customs data showed exports of yttrium, dysprosium and terbium still down about 50% since April 2025 controls were imposed. “Headline export volumes can be misleading,” Ilya Epikhin, senior principal at Arthur D. Little, told Reuters, adding that China appeared to be selectively licensing exports in sensitive supply chains. Reuters
For Lynas, the key stock argument is whether policy support turns into steadier pricing and offtake. The company’s March-quarter report showed gross sales revenue of A$265 million, sales receipts of A$234 million and cash and short-term deposits of A$1.07 billion; it also said neodymium-praseodymium, or NdPr, production reached 1,996 tonnes. NdPr is the rare-earth mix used in high-strength magnets.
Lynas also said its updated Japan Australia Rare Earths agreement included firm offtake for 5,000 tonnes a year of NdPr with a US$110/kg floor price, meaning a minimum agreed price, and that a U.S. government letter of intent would allocate about US$96 million to buy light and heavy rare-earth oxides over four years.
Chief Executive Amanda Lacaze has argued that regulation is already changing buyer behaviour. “In both cases, we are observing changed purchasing decisions so that consumers can comply with the regulations,” she said this month, referring to U.S. and European rules steering customers away from Chinese rare-earth supply. Reuters
The competitive readout is mixed. USA Rare Earth, one of the U.S. names trying to build a mine-to-magnet chain, reported first-quarter revenue of $5.7 million and a $36.7 million operating loss, while ending March with about $1.75 billion in cash; CEO Barbara Humpton called the quarter a “period of fundamental transformation.” MP Materials remains the other U.S. benchmark after a Pentagon price-support deal based on a US$110/kg NdPr floor. USA Rare Earth
The Financial Times reported over the weekend that a rare-earth deal rush was reshaping the sector as Western governments and companies try to loosen China’s grip, with USA Rare Earth among the companies expanding through acquisitions and government-backed funding. That keeps the strategic premium alive, but it also sharpens scrutiny of valuations after a strong run in rare-earth shares.
But the trade can go the other way. A broader China-U.S. easing could take heat out of rare-earth prices, and Lynas has already warned that higher material costs are expected and that the scale and duration are hard to forecast. David Merriman, research director at Project Blue, told Reuters that full replacement of China remained years away: “The situation looks set to get worse before getting any better.” Reuters
For the week ahead, traders will watch whether Lynas can hold the A$17.77 low marked on Friday and whether rare-earth headlines out of the U.S.-China talks add support before the ASX open. The stock still has policy tailwinds, but last week’s price action showed investors are willing to sell first when the rally looks crowded.