Northern Star Resources Stock Gains 8.4% as Elliott Campaign Offsets Gold Weakness

Northern Star Resources Stock Gains 8.4% as Elliott Campaign Offsets Gold Weakness

June 21, 2026

Perth, June 21, 2026, 23:04 (AWST)

  • Northern Star closed Friday at A$20.87, down 2.9% for the session but 8.4% above its June 12 close.
  • Gold weakened on Friday as higher interest-rate expectations continued to weigh on the non-yielding metal.
  • Northern Star’s next scheduled quarterly report is not due until July 29, leaving corporate strategy and bullion prices as near-term drivers.

Northern Star Resources Ltd ended a volatile week with a solid gain, despite giving back 2.9% on Friday. The shares settled at A$20.87, against A$19.26 a week earlier, while the Australian market remained closed for the weekend.

The move matters because it came against a softer bullion backdrop and amid continuing pressure from Elliott Investment Management. The divergence suggests investors are retaining some value in the possibility of a sale, asset restructuring or faster leadership change. It is not, by itself, evidence that a transaction is near.

Friday’s reversal was largely sector-wide. Evolution Mining dropped 5.1% and Newmont’s ASX-listed securities lost 6.7%, both more than Northern Star, while the S&P/ASX 200 fell 0.92% to 8,828.70.

Spot gold was down 0.9% at US$4,169.44 an ounce by 1306 GMT on Friday and headed for a third consecutive weekly loss. A firmer U.S. dollar and the Federal Reserve’s tougher rate outlook weighed on bullion, which pays no interest and becomes less attractive as bond yields rise. “Higher-for-longer Fed expectations are toxic for non-yielding assets,” said Nikos Tzabouras, senior market analyst at Tradu.com. Reuters

Elliott, which has built a stake worth more than A$1 billion, wants a formal strategic review, a stronger board and consideration of a company sale. Barrenjoey analyst Daniel Morgan said the activist’s involvement was likely to make Northern Star “act faster,” while the miner searches for a new chief executive and prepares for Chairman Michael Chaney’s retirement in November. Reuters

Chaney has resisted an immediate auction. He told shareholders that “we do not consider that this is the right time” for a sale process, though Northern Star remains open to serious approaches. The company also disclosed that potential corporate combinations and a spin-off of smaller assets had been examined. That leaves the door ajar, but not open.

The week’s latest company filing showed Northern Star bought back 230,801 shares on June 12 at between A$19.08 and A$19.51. Including earlier purchases, the miner had repurchased about 5.70 million shares for roughly A$116 million under its program of up to A$500 million. Repurchases may support the share price, but they do not settle the argument over operations or portfolio structure.

The operating benchmark remains demanding. Northern Star sold 380,807 ounces in the March quarter at an all-in sustaining cost of A$2,709 an ounce. That measure includes mine operating costs and spending needed to maintain output. Full-year guidance stands at more than 1.5 million ounces with costs of A$2,600 to A$2,800 an ounce; Managing Director Stuart Tonkin said the outlook was “particularly dependent on mill throughput at KCGM.”

But the clearest downside is execution. Another throughput setback at KCGM, a delay to the expanded Fimiston plant or a further slide in gold could test the rebound. Activist pressure may accelerate decisions, yet it could also leave the shares trading on expectations rather than delivered production if the board rejects a sale review and no firm bidder emerges. Northern Star said the mill expansion remains on schedule for commissioning early in fiscal 2027.

The coming week brings Australia’s May consumer-price report on Wednesday and the U.S. personal consumption expenditures price index—the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge—on Thursday. Hot readings would reinforce rate-rise expectations and could keep gold miners under pressure; softer numbers would offer relief. With no scheduled Northern Star operating report this week, bullion, Elliott and any further board response should set the tone when trading resumes.

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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