Today: 8 June 2026
Lynas Rare Earths stock whipsaws into the close as CEO succession talk meets critical-minerals politics
15 January 2026
2 mins read

Lynas Rare Earths stock whipsaws into the close as CEO succession talk meets critical-minerals politics

Sydney, Jan 15, 2026, 16:52 AEDT — After-hours.

  • Lynas Rare Earths slipped 0.8%, after earlier reaching A$16.17 during the session
  • CEO Amanda Lacaze is set to retire, prompting the board to launch a search for her successor
  • Investors are eyeing the Jan. 21 quarterly report for fresh clues on demand and pricing

Lynas Rare Earths Ltd shares fell 0.8% Thursday, closing at A$15.43 after briefly rallying to A$16.17 earlier in the session. The rare earths miner’s market cap stands around A$15.5 billion.

The late-day slip is significant since Lynas offers a high-beta play on two fronts: securing supply chains for strategic minerals and navigating a leadership change at one of the West’s rare large-scale producers outside China.

This month, fast money has rushed into those themes. The stock’s swings have tracked policy headlines and positioning more than company-specific news. The coming sessions will reveal whether that buying momentum holds steady.

In a market filing dated Jan. 13, Lynas revealed that CEO and managing director Amanda Lacaze plans to retire after 12 years at the helm. She intends to remain in her role until the end of the current financial year while the board searches for her successor. Lacaze said she had “loved every day” in the position and highlighted wrapping up the “Lynas 2025” investment program alongside launching the “Towards 2030” growth strategy. Chair John Humphrey noted the company’s market value had surged from roughly A$400 million in 2014 to nearly A$15 billion.

Some investors welcomed the timing. Dylan Kelly from shareholder Terra Capital described Lacaze’s track record as “spectacular,” while Andy Forster, a portfolio manager at Argo Investments, pointed out that Lynas already had “a plant up and running” ahead of competitors. Both, however, emphasized that picking the next CEO will be crucial. Reuters

Policy is another key factor. This week, Australia announced it will focus on rare earths, antimony, and gallium within a A$1.2 billion critical minerals strategic reserve. The plan involves tools like forward contracts and offtake agreements—contracts to purchase future output—as it aims to secure supply chains for allies and cut dependence on China. Treasurer Jim Chalmers said the reserve will help Australia “weather global economic uncertainty” while boosting trade and investment. Reuters

Overnight, the U.S. threw in a new development. President Donald Trump announced he won’t slap tariffs on rare earths, lithium, or other critical minerals for the time being. Instead, he directed efforts toward negotiations with trade partners to lock in supplies, including “price floors” — essentially setting minimum import prices. Reuters

Policy support seldom comes without complications. The impact hinges on specifics — volumes, pricing models, participant commitments — and these factors often evolve rapidly during government talks. On top of that, CEO changes can rattle investors, especially if leadership transitions stall or strategic goals pivot.

Lynas occupies a tight niche. Investors commonly group it with U.S. rare-earths miner MP Materials and a few Australian hopefuls, especially as the market shifts between concerns over “China risk” and bouts of “too much optimism,” leading to choppy price moves.

Lynas will release its quarterly report for the period ending Dec. 31 on Wednesday, Jan. 21. Lacaze is set to lead an analyst and shareholder briefing at 12 p.m. Sydney time. Investors will be looking to see if the numbers back up the narrative—or if Thursday’s pullback was just a blip.

Stock Market Today

  • South Korean stock volatility sparks concerns over leveraged investing
    June 7, 2026, 11:07 PM EDT. South Korea's stock market shows increased volatility, driven by heavy weighting of semiconductor giants Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix, which together represent nearly half of the nation's benchmark index. The surge in artificial intelligence demand has boosted these chipmakers, but also led to soaring margin balances-borrowed funds used to buy stocks-raising concerns about leveraged investing risks amid market fluctuations.

Latest articles

Snap Drops 5%—Ad Recovery Eyed Next

Snap Drops 5%—Ad Recovery Eyed Next

8 June 2026
Snap closed Friday at $5.76, down 5.11% amid a broad tech selloff triggered by a strong jobs report and renewed rate-hike worries, but still ended the week up 0.9%. Investors now await U.S. inflation data and CEO Evan Spiegel’s June 16 AWE keynote on Specs, as Snap faces pressure from weak North American ad revenue, tough competition, and activist demands for cost cuts.
Navitas’ Nvidia-Led Rally Stalls, Eyes on AI Trade Next Week

Navitas’ Nvidia-Led Rally Stalls, Eyes on AI Trade Next Week

8 June 2026
Navitas plunged $5.61 to $25.08 Friday as a $1.3 trillion chip selloff erased Nvidia-driven gains, despite news it issued 3.28 million shares for merger earn-outs and showcased its GaNFast power board at Nvidia’s AI MGX event; investors now face risks from share dilution, sector volatility, and Navitas’s early-stage pivot to high-power AI markets amid ongoing operating losses.
NIO Stock Drops Even as Deliveries Jump, Focus Turns to June Numbers

NIO Stock Drops Even as Deliveries Jump, Focus Turns to June Numbers

8 June 2026
NIO’s U.S.-listed shares plunged 5.8% Friday, erasing a delivery-led rally, as investors focus on whether June sales can hit the company’s Q2 target after May deliveries rose 62.3% to 37,705. NIO needs 42,939–47,939 June deliveries to meet guidance, with risks from China’s saturated car market and recent price pressure.
HPE Stock Faces AI Rally Test With Monday In Focus

HPE Stock Faces AI Rally Test With Monday In Focus

8 June 2026
Hewlett Packard Enterprise plunged 8.36% Friday to $49.20, capping a three-day slide and erasing gains after a post-earnings surge, even as it raised its fiscal 2026 revenue growth outlook to 29%-33% and boosted non-GAAP EPS guidance, with analysts warning that rapid gains may have priced in too much hope too quickly.
Morgan Stanley stock slips before earnings as Wall Street digests big-bank signals
Previous Story

Morgan Stanley stock slips before earnings as Wall Street digests big-bank signals

NASA pulls Crew-11 from ISS in first medical evacuation as SpaceX Dragon heads for splashdown
Next Story

NASA pulls Crew-11 from ISS in first medical evacuation as SpaceX Dragon heads for splashdown

Go toTop