NEW YORK, June 1, 2026, 09:08 (EDT)
Namib Minerals’ Nasdaq-listed shares jumped before Monday’s open, quoted at $2.12 at 9:01 a.m. EDT, up 39.5% from Friday’s close of $1.52. The stock had already gained 4.8% in the prior regular session, with 541,009 shares changing hands.
The move matters now because it came without a fresh company release over the weekend. Namib’s public news feed still showed the May 19 Redwing dewatering update as its latest announcement, followed by the April 2 full-year results and business update.
This is a premarket move, meaning trading before the main exchange session, when liquidity is often thinner and price moves can look bigger. Nasdaq lists regular U.S. stock-market hours as 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Eastern time, with premarket trading from 4 a.m. to 9:30 a.m.; its 2026 holiday table shows the next June closure as Juneteenth on June 19.
The operational hook is Redwing. Dewatering — pumping water out of mine workings so crews can regain underground access — is the near-term test for restarting the Zimbabwe mine, and Namib said on May 19 it had pumped about 544,570 cubic meters of water since Jan. 29. Chief Executive Tulani Sikwila said Redwing was “advancing on schedule,” while the company described the asset as a brownfield site, meaning a previously mined operation, with 650,000 ounces of historical gold production and 1.18 million ounces in measured and indicated resources. GlobeNewswire
At How Mine, its current producing asset, Namib reported April 2 that 2025 output was about 25,000 ounces of gold and revenue was $82.6 million. For 2026 it guided to 28,000 to 31,500 ounces of production and adjusted EBITDA of $50 million to $62 million, based on a $4,500-an-ounce gold price; adjusted EBITDA is a company-defined profit measure that strips out items such as tax, finance costs, depreciation and amortization.
The stock is still a small-cap, volatile trade. Robinhood’s quote page put Namib’s market value near $83 million and showed a 52-week range from $0.9138 to $55.00, a wide spread that underlines how quickly price can detach from fresh operating news.
The closest listed Zimbabwe gold comparison is Caledonia Mining, not a global major. Caledonia said in April that first-quarter output at its Blanket Mine fell to 14,767 ounces from 18,671 a year earlier, but it kept full-year Blanket guidance at 72,000 to 76,500 ounces; CEO Mark Learmonth said production was “below our expectations” and weighted to the second half.
But the Namib trade can still break the other way. A premarket surge may fade once regular trading deepens the order book, and the company itself has cited risks tied to gold and equipment prices, raising capital, developing How, Redwing and Mazowe, and political and social conditions in Zimbabwe.
The first check comes at the open. For now, Monday’s move is less about a new filing than about whether traders are willing to price Redwing restart progress ahead of the next hard update.