Lynas Rare Earths stock drops after Malaysia licence renewal: ASX:LYC closes lower

March 3, 2026
Lynas Rare Earths stock drops after Malaysia licence renewal: ASX:LYC closes lower

Sydney, March 3, 2026, 17:37 AEDT — After-hours

Lynas Rare Earths (LYC.AX) closed Tuesday at A$19.04, off 4.8%, snapping back after climbing past A$20 the previous session. Shares moved between A$18.60 and A$20.07 in the session, with roughly 8.1 million shares traded.

Lynas shares pulled back after Malaysia granted a fresh 10-year operating licence, finally clearing up the persistent regulatory risk hanging over its main processing plant. According to the science ministry, Lynas gets a break on building a disposal site for water leach purification residue until 2031. But in five years, the company has to halt production of radioactive waste and neutralise residue—using either thorium extraction or any other approved technique. “What they produce before or within five years must be neutralised into waste that is no longer radioactive,” science minister Chang Lih Kang said at a press conference. Reuters

Lynas stands out as one of the rare earths processors operating outside China, so Malaysia’s licensing stance has become a key swing factor for the company’s earnings and any expansion. Rare earths themselves serve as essential metals for permanent magnets, showing up in electric motors, electronics, and defence systems.

Lynas announced it’s received word from Malaysia’s Department of Atomic Energy that the Lynas Malaysia operating licence has been renewed—this time for 10 years, starting March 3. The formal licence paperwork will follow. CEO Amanda Lacaze called the decade-long term a boost for “greater investment certainty,” both for Lynas itself and its “supply chain partners and customers.” Markit Digital

The permit is set to expire on March 3, 2036, and comes up for review after five years, the Associated Press reported. Authorities could revoke it if terms aren’t met. Chang noted that current radioactive waste will go to a permanent disposal site now being built, with completion expected by year-end. Industrial-scale thorium extraction, he added, is still years off.

On Tuesday, moves pointed to profit-taking following Monday’s relief rally. Some investors shifted their attention from the headline renewal to the nuts and bolts—how Lynas plans to handle the five-year waste deadline in real terms. Meeting those compliance requirements might come with a hefty price tag, and any holdup could trigger closer examination.

But it’s a double-edged sword. If residue treatment goes off without a hitch and future licence conditions get spelled out, that could steady sentiment. Another round of political friction in Malaysia or trouble with the waste neutralisation process would put that to the test.

Traders are now zeroing in on the official licence from the Malaysian regulator, plus any new word from Lynas about how it expects to handle the five-year deadline—costs, operations, the whole package.

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