Lynas Rare Earths (ASX: LYC) Stock on 4 December 2025: Power Shocks, Heavy Rare Earths and the 2026 Outlook

Lynas Rare Earths (ASX: LYC) Stock on 4 December 2025: Power Shocks, Heavy Rare Earths and the 2026 Outlook

Lynas Rare Earths Limited (ASX: LYC), the biggest producer of separated rare earths outside China, is ending 2025 at the centre of three intersecting storylines: surging strategic demand, messy grid problems in Western Australia, and a multi‑billion‑dollar expansion into heavy rare earths and magnets.

As of early afternoon on 4 December 2025, Lynas shares trade around A$14.10, valuing the company at roughly A$14–15 billion. The stock has more than doubled from its 52‑week low near A$6.16, but remains about 35% below its October peak above A$21.60. [1]

Below is a detailed look at the latest share price action, operational news, analyst views and market forecasts shaping Lynas’ 2026 outlook.


Lynas share price today: cooling after a huge 2025 run

  • Current price: ~A$14.1 (13:45 AEST, 4 December 2025)
  • Day range (so far): A$14.03–14.80
  • 52‑week range: A$6.16–about A$21.9
  • Market cap: ~A$14.2–15.1 billion
  • Dividend yield: 0% – Lynas currently pays no dividend. [2]

Data from Intelligent Investor and TradingView show that Lynas has delivered a ~129% gain from its 52‑week low, but is down roughly a third from its October high, underscoring just how volatile rare‑earths equities have been in 2025. [3]

On fundamentals, trailing twelve‑month revenue is a little over A$550 million, but net profit for FY25 was only about A$8–9 million, driving a trailing P/E ratio above 1,500 on some data services. Forward P/E estimates for FY26 fall into the high‑30s to high‑40s, reflecting expectations of a sharp earnings recovery as new projects ramp. Ts2 Tech+1

TradingView’s technical models currently flag “sell” on a daily basis, neutral over one week, and “buy” on a one‑month horizon, while StockInvest.us describes the stock as a short‑term “sell candidate” within a broad falling trend. [4]


2025 financials: strong top line, thin bottom line

Lynas’ latest quarterly report, for the three months to 30 September 2025 (Q1 FY26), showed that the business is still growing quickly despite profit pressures: [5]

  • Gross sales revenue: A$200.2m (up 18% quarter‑on‑quarter and 66% year‑on‑year)
  • Sales receipts: A$171.3m
  • Ready‑for‑sale REO production: 3,993 tonnes (including 2,003 tonnes of NdPr)
  • First recorded production of heavy rare earths: 9 tonnes of dysprosium (Dy) and terbium (Tb)
  • Closing cash and short‑term deposits: A$1.06 billion

Finimize notes that Q4 FY25 revenue grew 38% quarter‑on‑quarter to A$170.2m, with Q1 FY26 adding another step up to A$200.2m as production increased about 22% sequentially. [6]

Yet for the full year to 30 June 2025, Lynas reported net profit of only A$8 million, down from A$84.5 million a year earlier and well below analyst forecasts around A$30 million. Reuters attributes the slump to higher depreciation and amortisation from the Kalgoorlie and Mt Weld expansion projects, alongside persistent market and cost “headwinds”. [7]

To fund its growth pipeline, Lynas completed a A$750 million institutional placement in August 2025, followed by a share purchase plan (SPP) that raised about A$182 million, leaving it with over A$1 billion in cash going into FY26. [8]

The result is a company with rapidly growing volumes and revenue, but compressed earnings, as management spends heavily on expansion and absorbs the early‑stage costs of new facilities.


Kalgoorlie power outages: a one‑month production hole

The biggest near‑term negative for Lynas is not geology, but electricity.

In late November, Lynas warned the ASX that repeated power supply disruptions at its new Kalgoorlie Rare Earths Processing Facility in Western Australia will slash output by about one month of production in the current quarter. [9]

Key points from company and media reports:

  • The outages have caused “significant lost production” of mixed rare earth carbonate (MREC), the intermediate product that feeds Lynas’ Malaysian advanced materials plant. [10]
  • Rare Earth Exchanges estimates that expected MREC output has been cut from about 2.7kt to 1.8kt for the quarter, prompting brokers such as Canaccord Genuity to trim NdPr production forecasts and model a roughly A$60m hit to quarterly revenue and a ~35% drop in EBITDA versus prior expectations. [11]
  • The Australian reports that management is bracing for around a one‑third reduction in December‑quarter production, although Lynas still expects to meet key customer commitments. [12]

The outages stem from Kalgoorlie’s position at the end of a single high‑voltage transmission line on Western Australia’s South West Interconnected System (SWIS). ABC News highlights that large industrial customers in the region can be curtailed during periods of stress so that power can be prioritised for homes and small businesses. [13]

Lynas is now working with the WA government and state utility Western Power on off‑grid and hybrid solutions and says it aims to recover lost production later in FY26. The company is also completing a 46MW hybrid solar‑and‑wind power station at its Mt Weld mine, which supplied about 74% renewable power there in September and could, over time, reduce reliance on the fragile regional grid. [14]

For investors, the immediate implication is clear: December‑quarter earnings are likely to be weaker than the strong September quarter, even if the medium‑term production profile is unchanged.


Expansion pipeline: heavy rare earths and magnets

Despite near‑term operational noise, Lynas is in the middle of a substantial expansion designed to make it the backbone of non‑Chinese rare earth supply.

1. Malaysian heavy rare earth separation – A$180m project

In late October, Lynas announced a A$180 million expansion of its Kuantan, Malaysia plant to build a new heavy rare earth (HRE) separation facility. [15]

  • The project will be fully funded from the recent A$750m equity raise and SPP. [16]
  • It is designed to process up to 5,000 tonnes per year of heavy rare earth feedstock.
  • Initial production will focus on samarium, gadolinium, dysprosium, terbium and lutetium, with potential to add other HREs such as europium and holmium subject to commercial agreements. [17]
  • First samarium production is targeted for April 2026, with additional capacity to be phased in over the following two years. [18]

This builds on Lynas’ first commercial production of Dy and Tb oxides in Malaysia earlier in 2025, which already made it the only commercial‑scale producer of separated heavy rare earths outside China. [19]

2. Heavy rare earth exports to Japan

Japan’s trading house Sojitz has now begun importing Lynas’ heavy rare earths into Japan, under an agreement originally signed in 2023. Reuters notes that the deal covers dysprosium and terbium, key additives for high‑performance magnets, and that Sojitz already commands over 70% of neodymium sales in the Japanese market. [20]

Rare Earth Exchanges describes this as the first non‑Chinese dysprosium and terbium supply chain into Japan, and emphasises that much of Lynas’ early HRE output is effectively “spoken for” by Japanese customers. [21]

3. Malaysian magnet plant with JS Link

On the downstream side, Lynas has signed a memorandum of understanding with South Korea’s JS Link to build a 600 million ringgit (about US$142m) magnet plant near its Kuantan facility. [22]

  • The planned plant will produce up to 3,000 tonnes per year of neodymium‑iron‑boron magnets, primarily for EVs and other high‑efficiency motors. [23]
  • Malaysia’s prime minister has described the project as a key step in strengthening the country’s rare earth sector and moving up the value chain into high‑value components. [24]

4. Noveon Magnetics partnership in the US

In October, Lynas also signed an MoU with Texas‑based Noveon Magnetics, one of the few producers of sintered NdFeB magnets outside China. The partnership aims to create a fully traceable mine‑to‑magnet supply chain serving U.S. defense and commercial customers. [25]

Noveon says demand has been strong enough that it has had to turn away orders, while a recent five‑year, 1,000‑tonne magnet contract with Nidec shows the scale of potential end‑markets. [26]

Together, the JS Link and Noveon deals form the backbone of Lynas’ “Towards 2030” growth strategy, which focuses on partnering with experienced magnet makers rather than trying to move into magnet manufacturing alone. [27]


Texas plant in limbo and US policy shifts

The main cloud over Lynas’ U.S. growth story is its Seadrift, Texas heavy rare earths processing project.

Reuters reported in August that Lynas flagged “significant uncertainty” over whether construction of the plant would proceed, even though it was originally being developed under a contract with the U.S. Department of Defense and was slated to begin operations in FY26. [28]

More recent industry coverage suggests:

  • Offtake negotiations with the Pentagon have stalled, with U.S. policy shifting toward favouring domestic rival MP Materials via a multibillion‑dollar deal that includes a price floor for magnet output. [29]
  • The collapse of a wastewater‑treatment partnership with Dow Chemical earlier in 2025 created additional regulatory hurdles for the Seadrift plant. [30]

Lynas has repeatedly reaffirmed its support for building rare earth capacity outside China, but CEO Amanda Lacaze has warned that the Texas project “might not proceed” under current conditions. [31]


Policy backdrop: price floors and Chinese export controls

The policy environment for rare earths has shifted significantly in 2025.

Australian price floor for critical minerals

In August, Australia’s resources minister revealed that the government is considering a price floor mechanism for critical minerals, including rare earths, as part of a A$1.2 billion strategic reserve plan. Reuters reported that the policy would use national offtake agreements to give producers price certainty in opaque and volatile markets, with a particular focus on heavy rare earths. [32]

The announcement triggered a sharp rally in Australian rare‑earths stocks, with Lynas shares jumping more than 6% to a 13‑year high on the day. [33]

China’s export controls and new “general licences”

On the other side of the ledger, China—still dominant in rare earth mining and separation—introduced tighter export controls in April 2025, forcing exporters to obtain licences for each shipment and causing severe disruptions in parts of the global auto supply chain. [34]

On 2 December 2025, Reuters reported that Beijing has now issued the first batch of new “general licences” that allow selected companies to ship rare earth products to specific customers under year‑long permits, easing some of the earlier bottlenecks. However, China has not dismantled its export control regime, and European firms continue to complain about delays and opacity. [35]

For Lynas, the combination of Australian support measures and lingering Chinese export uncertainty strengthens its role as a strategic non‑Chinese supplier—but also keeps price and policy risk elevated.


Rare earths market outlook: demand still building

Lynas’ long‑term thesis rests on demand for neodymium‑praseodymium (NdPr) and heavy rare earths used in high‑performance magnets.

Recent industry research highlights:

  • Praseodymium prices are up nearly 50% year‑to‑date in 2025, driven by tighter Chinese controls, reduced feed from US producer MP Materials into China and robust EV and wind demand. Strategic Metals Invest expects demand growth for praseodymium to remain strong through 2030 as NdFeB magnets remain the industry standard. [36]
  • Heavy rare earths such as terbium have seen even sharper gains; some analysis points to Tb prices rising well over 100% in 2025 as buyers scramble for non‑Chinese supply. [37]
  • IDTechEx forecasts that the global rare earth magnet market will exceed US$9.19 billion in annual revenue by 2036, growing at a 3.9% CAGR from 2026 to 2036, with magnet recycling gradually supplying up to 10% of global rare earth inputs. [38]
  • A special report from BMI (Fitch Solutions) emphasises that rare earths have become a strategic geopolitical lever, and provides five‑year price forecasts for PrNd oxide that assume continued tightness as new ex‑China supplies are slow to ramp. [39]

In this context, Lynas’ integrated mine‑to‑oxide model and emerging heavy rare earth business give it a structural advantage—but they also mean the company is heavily exposed to commodity price swings.


How analysts and models see Lynas now

Fundamental views

A number of recent analyses converge on the idea that Lynas is strategically attractive but not cheap:

  • TechStock²’s 2 December 2025 update notes that with trailing 12‑month revenue around A$556.5m and net profit about A$8m, Lynas screens as “comically expensive” on trailing earnings (P/E > 1,800) but far more reasonable on forward multiples, with a forward P/E near the mid‑30s based on consensus forecasts. Ts2 Tech
  • Stocks Down Under emphasises the same tension: Lynas remains the best‑established non‑Chinese player with new heavy rare earth capabilities, but FY25 profit plunged and the company is in a capital‑intensive build‑out phase. The authors argue that Lynas offers more stability and lower execution risk than junior explorers, but less explosive upside. [40]
  • Intelligent Investor data shows consensus forecasts for net profit rising from A$8.9m in FY25 to about A$31m in FY26 and A$74m in FY27, with the forward P/E falling from over 1,500x to around 48x (FY26) and 20x (FY27) if those earnings materialise. [41]

The broker community remains divided. A recent (paywalled) note from Macquarie, reported by The Motley Fool, points out that Lynas shares are up about 130% in 2025 and still rates them to outperform the market into 2026, citing its unique strategic position and growth pipeline. [42]

Technical and algorithmic forecasts

On the quantitative side:

  • StockInvest.us currently labels LYC a short‑term “sell”, expecting a modest negative drift (~‑3–4%) over the next three months within a wide but falling trend. Ts2 Tech
  • WalletInvestor’s purely technical model projects the share price rising from about A$14.35 on 4 December 2025 to roughly A$19 by late 2030, implying a five‑year gain of around 30–35%—essentially a modestly bullish, lower‑volatility trajectory after 2025’s fireworks. [43]
  • TradingView’s blended technical indicators, as noted earlier, flash “sell” for today, neutral for a week and “buy” on a one‑month view, which encapsulates the current consolidation after a huge rally. [44]

Algorithmic forecasts are, by construction, backward‑looking and should be treated as scenarios, not guarantees, but they provide a useful cross‑check on sentiment: the machines see upside, but not a repeat of 2025’s parabolic move.


US and global investor access

Another structural development in 2025 is Lynas’ growing accessibility to international investors.

In October 2025, Lynas upgraded to the OTCQX Best Market in the United States and now trades under the tickers LYSDY and LYSCF alongside its primary ASX listing. OTC Markets notes that the upgrade required higher disclosure and governance standards and gives U.S. investors easier access to real‑time Level 2 quotes and company information. [45]

This move, combined with its inclusion in multiple critical‑minerals and thematic strategies, has helped to broaden the shareholder base beyond Australian institutions and retail investors.


Key upside and downside drivers for 2026

Putting all of this together, the main forces likely to shape Lynas Rare Earths’ share price over the next 12–18 months are:

Upside drivers

  • Ramp‑up of heavy rare earths production in Malaysia and expanded separation capacity, which could materially lift margins if Dy/Tb prices stay strong. [46]
  • Execution on magnet partnerships (JS Link in Malaysia, Noveon in the US), creating higher‑value, more sticky downstream revenue. [47]
  • Policy support, including any concrete Australian price‑floor mechanism or further Western government backing for non‑Chinese supply chains. [48]
  • Sustained strength in NdPr and heavy rare earth prices as EV, wind and defence demand continue to build. [49]

Downside risks

  • Resolution of Kalgoorlie’s power issues takes longer than expected, leading to repeated outages, higher capex on backup power and further production disappointments. [50]
  • China’s export policy eases more than anticipated, softening global prices and eroding Lynas’ pricing power, especially if new ex‑China competitors ramp at the same time. [51]
  • Regulatory or political setbacks in Malaysia, where Lynas’ main processing hub and future HRE expansion are based, remain an ongoing tail risk highlighted by multiple analysts. [52]
  • Execution risk across the expansion portfolio (Malaysia HRE project, magnet partnerships, and any revived Texas plan) combined with elevated capex—Lynas itself guides for capex around A$160m in FY26. [53]

Bottom line: strategically vital, but priced for continued delivery

As of 4 December 2025, Lynas Rare Earths sits at a crossroads:

  • It is the only large‑scale producer of both light and heavy rare earth oxides outside China, with rising volumes, a deep pipeline of growth projects and strong strategic customers in Japan, the US and Europe. [54]
  • At the same time, it faces short‑term production headwinds from Kalgoorlie’s power problems, profit compression from heavy capital spending and an increasingly complex policy and competitive landscape.

For long‑term investors seeking exposure to rare earths, Lynas remains the anchor play in the “non‑China” theme. But after a year in which the share price has more than doubled, markets are clearly pricing in continued flawless execution on heavy rare earths, magnet partnerships and grid fixes.

The next major checkpoints will be December‑quarter production and earnings numbers, any concrete details on Australian price‑floor mechanisms, and updates on Malaysia’s HRE expansion, the JS Link and Noveon magnet projects, and the fate of the Texas plant. These will go a long way in determining whether Lynas’ 2025 rally pauses, consolidates—or resumes.

References

1. www.intelligentinvestor.com.au, 2. www.intelligentinvestor.com.au, 3. www.intelligentinvestor.com.au, 4. www.tradingview.com, 5. wcsecure.weblink.com.au, 6. finimize.com, 7. www.reuters.com, 8. wcsecure.weblink.com.au, 9. www.intelligentinvestor.com.au, 10. www.intelligentinvestor.com.au, 11. rareearthexchanges.com, 12. www.theaustralian.com.au, 13. www.abc.net.au, 14. wcsecure.weblink.com.au, 15. www.capitalbrief.com, 16. www.capitalbrief.com, 17. www.capitalbrief.com, 18. www.capitalbrief.com, 19. stocksdownunder.com, 20. www.reuters.com, 21. rareearthexchanges.com, 22. www.reuters.com, 23. www.bernama.com, 24. www.reuters.com, 25. www.prnewswire.com, 26. www.expressnews.com, 27. wcsecure.weblink.com.au, 28. www.reuters.com, 29. rareearthexchanges.com, 30. discoveryalert.com.au, 31. rareearthexchanges.com, 32. www.reuters.com, 33. www.reuters.com, 34. www.reuters.com, 35. www.reuters.com, 36. strategicmetalsinvest.com, 37. strategicmetalsinvest.com, 38. www.idtechex.com, 39. www.fitchsolutions.com, 40. stocksdownunder.com, 41. www.intelligentinvestor.com.au, 42. www.fool.com.au, 43. walletinvestor.com, 44. www.tradingview.com, 45. www.stocktitan.net, 46. wcsecure.weblink.com.au, 47. www.bernama.com, 48. www.reuters.com, 49. strategicmetalsinvest.com, 50. www.abc.net.au, 51. www.reuters.com, 52. stocksdownunder.com, 53. www.reuters.com, 54. www.stocktitan.net

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