Perth, June 24, 2026, 02:07 (AWST)
PLS Group shares fell 1.1% to A$5.47 on Tuesday, extending their three-session loss to 11.3%. The stock traded between A$5.36 and A$5.62, with 25.3 million shares changing hands.
The retreat gathered pace after the lithium producer approved about A$175 million of spending before a final investment decision on its P2000 expansion at Pilgangoora. Pre-FID spending means committing money to engineering, equipment and early construction work before the board formally sanctions the full project.
P2000 could lift Pilgangoora’s lithium concentrate capacity to about 2 million tonnes a year. A feasibility study is due in the December quarter, with first ore targeted for mid-2029 if the board proceeds. Chief Executive Dale Henderson said the early work “preserves optionality and maintains momentum along the critical path.” PLS
Morningstar analyst Esther Holloway wrote on Monday that the project had “reached a new milestone.” The share-price response suggests investors are also weighing the near-term cash commitment against production that remains several years away. Morningstar
The wider market offered little help. The S&P/ASX 200 lost 0.33% to close at 8,787, while higher US rate expectations strengthened the dollar and pressured materials shares. IG market analyst Tony Sycamore wrote that the currency move left the sector “particularly exposed” as metals prices weakened. Investing
Lithium peers also fell, making the decline broader than PLS alone. Core Lithium dropped 5% and Liontown lost 1.1%, while PLS finished near the middle of that range.
PLS plans to deploy the early capital during the 2027 financial year. The work covers processing-plant engineering and procurement, site preparation and Wodgina Road East infrastructure, including orders for equipment with long manufacturing lead times.
But P2000 is not yet approved, and a final decision still depends on the study, funding capacity and lithium-market conditions. Future supply is another uncertainty: plans disclosed this week for the rival Andover project in Western Australia envisage as much as 1.1 million tonnes of annual concentrate output if it is developed.
The December-quarter study is now the next major valuation test. Until then, PLS shares remain caught between the strategic value of securing a larger Pilgangoora footprint and the risk of spending ahead of clear evidence that lithium prices can support the expansion.