Vancouver, May 30, 2026, 08:04 PDT
Northern Dynasty Minerals Ltd. shares in the U.S. rallied Friday, ending the session up 7.31% at $2.35 after about 8.78 million shares traded. For the holiday-shortened U.S. week, the stock is up roughly 13.5% from last Friday. In Canada, Northern Dynasty closed at C$3.24 on the Toronto exchange, a 7.64% gain for the day and 13.3% higher than its May 22 close.
May 30 lands on a Saturday, so markets are shut. Last week’s rally is the focus as investors look to June. The NYSE was also closed Monday, May 25 for Memorial Day, leaving NAK with just four full trading sessions in the U.S.
Why now: shares approach a month with a court hearing and a shareholder vote scheduled. Northern Dynasty and Pebble Limited Partnership said in April all briefs were in for their Alaska federal suit aimed at overturning the EPA veto, with oral arguments set for June 25.
Northern is still mostly a Pebble name for the market. The company says its main asset is a full interest—through its Alaska subsidiary—in 1,840 mineral claims in southwest Alaska. Those claims include the Pebble deposit, about 200 miles from Anchorage and 125 miles from Bristol Bay.
Governance is up next. In a May 19 SEC filing, the company released documents for its June 24 annual meeting in Vancouver. Shareholders will be asked to receive financials, elect directors, appoint the auditor, and approve more unallocated share options under the plan until June 24, 2029.
Northern filed an updated share-option plan on May 21. The plan sets aside as much as 8% of outstanding shares for option grants and puts a 5 million-share cap on U.S. incentive stock options.
Canadian miners traded up as the broader market lifted, but there was little project-level news driving the move. The TSX closed higher Thursday after gains in technology and metal-mining stocks, according to Reuters. Robert Gill, portfolio manager at Fairbank Investment Management, told Reuters the market was moving “less by individual stock stories” and more on macro themes. Reuters
Northern CEO Ron Thiessen in April called the veto “illegal” and said management was “highly confident” the court would side with them. The company has said the EPA’s economic analysis left out potential benefits and set the bar too low for negative impacts. Northern Dynasty Minerals Ltd.
EPA’s 2023 veto stopped mining waste discharge at Bristol Bay because of risks to fishing, Reuters reported in 2024. EPA said the mine would wipe out over 2,000 acres of wetlands. Pebble CEO John Shively argued critics hadn’t offered an economic alternative. The copper-gold project still hasn’t started construction after years of permitting.
Northern’s main comparables are Alaska developers like NOVAGOLD and Trilogy Metals, not broader diversified producers. NOVAGOLD said it’s still a development-stage company and hasn’t started production, but is spending on Donlin Gold feasibility work. Trilogy Metals owns half of Ambler Metals, which controls the Upper Kobuk projects in northwest Alaska.
The stock’s rally still hinges on a legal outcome that could go either way. Northern says future Pebble mining will need permits, a final mine plan, feasibility work, engineering, a partner and a lot of financing. A lost decision, delays or tighter funding could reverse last week’s gain.
Focus will be on positioning this week rather than production numbers. Investors will watch how trading picks up after the weekend, with Friday’s regular-session high as the first reference. A proxy deadline on June 22, the annual meeting on June 24, and the June 25 oral argument are the next scheduled dates for the company.