Sydney, May 17, 2026, 06:03 AEST
American Rare Earths Limited ended the week at A$0.410 on the ASX, rising 12.33% for the week. The company, developing projects in Wyoming, moved forward with its plans for a secondary listing on Nasdaq. Friday’s session marked its last ASX trade for the week before markets shut for the weekend.
Stocks linked to the U.S. critical-minerals supply chain are back in favor with investors, moving beyond just the miners that dig up the raw materials. Rare earths—17 minerals used in electronics, defense, and magnets—remain under tough export limits. U.S. officials on Friday said that while Chinese export licenses are now processing more quickly, bottlenecks remain.
Australian shares fell on Friday, with the S&P/ASX 200 off 0.1% at 8,630.8. The index gave up 1.2% for the week. It was a volatile week as investors juggled housing-policy worries, U.S.-China talks, and new Middle East risks. The move was notable with most of the market under pressure.
American Rare Earths picked BDO Audit Pty Ltd as its auditor, effective May 12. The company is aiming for a Nasdaq listing in the U.S. in 2026. American Rare Earths has also brought on Rimon as its U.S. securities law adviser. The company wants to launch a Level 2 ADR program, subject to regulatory approval and market conditions. ADRs let U.S. investors trade shares of foreign companies as certificates.
American Rare Earths said it isn’t raising capital with the Nasdaq move and will keep its main listing in Australia on the ASX. CEO Mark Wall said bringing on BDO and Rimon was the “formal commencement” of the company’s Nasdaq process, and told reporters Nasdaq is the “appropriate market” for them. InvestorNews
American Rare Earths says it remains focused on the Halleck Creek project in Wyoming. The company is targeting supply of light and heavy rare earths for the U.S. magnet industry. Permitting is ongoing on state land in Wyoming.
Wall is promoting a pilot-plant proposal this week and posted on the National Mining Association website, calling the project a “massive step forward.” He said the company’s method might show results “within months,” as it focuses on milling, sizing, mineral separation and concentration, and then oxide refining. National Mining Association
Critical minerals spending is gaining speed as competition in the U.S. heats up. Reuters said in January that the Trump administration was taking a 10% stake in USA Rare Earth with a $1.6 billion mix of debt and equity, supporting development of a mine and magnet plant. The move came after earlier U.S. government equity going to MP Materials and other names in the space.
Policy is still a key factor along with the actual minerals. “Headline export volumes can be misleading,” Ilya Epikhin, senior principal at Arthur D. Little, told Reuters. Project Blue’s research director David Merriman said the supply crunch “looks set to get worse before getting any better.” Reuters
ARR is in focus this week as traders look to see if the stock stays at Friday’s price when the market opens and watch for news on its Nasdaq schedule. Trading volume on Friday reached 1.74 million shares, above what was seen during May 11–13.
Nasdaq says nothing is set yet. The company needs more approvals and market support, and no new money will come in from this. If risk sentiment dips, rare earth export rules get looser, or project timelines shift, last week’s rally could come back into focus.