Today: 25 June 2026
Mobix Labs Stock Soars 79% After Rare-Earth Deal Plan — Why MOBX Is Suddenly in the China Supply-Chain Fight
15 May 2026
3 mins read

Mobix Labs Stock Soars 79% After Rare-Earth Deal Plan — Why MOBX Is Suddenly in the China Supply-Chain Fight

IRVINE, California, May 15, 2026, 03:02 PDT

  • Mobix Labs has entered into a non-binding letter of intent for the acquisition of Special Project Delivery, a U.S.-based platform focused on critical minerals and energy storage.
  • MOBX finished Thursday’s session at $3.11, a jump of 78.74%, with volume at 158.8 million shares.
  • The company bumped up the principal on a Leviston Resources convertible note to $4.0 million, pulling in roughly $833,000 in fresh cash.

Mobix Labs Inc. jumped into the rare-earth supply chain on Thursday, announcing it had entered a non-binding letter of intent to buy Special Project Delivery LLC, a private U.S. group with a focus on rare earth elements, critical minerals, and energy storage. Shares in Mobix Labs finished the session up 78.74% at $3.11, with trading volume hitting 158.8 million shares, per the company’s delayed Nasdaq data from LSEG.

Here’s the issue: rare earth elements—critical for magnets, electronics, and defense—remain deeply tied to Chinese supply chains, and Washington wants to change that. Tougher U.S. defense procurement rules kick in on Jan. 1, 2027, broadening restrictions to cover every step in the neodymium-iron-boron magnet supply chain, from raw mining to finished magnets.

The situation hasn’t stabilized yet. Jamieson Greer, the U.S. Trade Representative, noted some progress in rare-earth shipments from China to the U.S., though certain export licenses from Beijing are still dragging. “I would give them a passing grade,” Greer said in an interview with Bloomberg Television, according to Reuters on Friday. Reuters

Mobix said SPD was launched in 2019 out of Newport Beach, California, holding assets in critical minerals, energy storage, and Western U.S. water infrastructure. The letter of intent sets out an initial path for due diligence and negotiations on final terms, but neither party is obligated to complete a deal.

Mobix Labs chairman James Peterson, who previously led Microsemi, called rare earths and critical minerals “one of the defining competitive battlegrounds” for the coming decade. SPD CEO Paul Singarella said the deal would link SPD with a publicly listed defense and dual-use tech firm that’s already active in aerospace and defense sectors. Mobix Labs, Inc

Financing developments played a role in the investor response as well. Mobix disclosed an amended senior secured convertible note with Leviston Resources, lifting the principal to $4.0 million from $3.0 million. In exchange, Mobix is getting roughly $833,000 in extra cash. Convertible notes function as debt that may convert to equity under certain conditions.

Cash is a pressing issue here. Mobix’s 10-Q for the December quarter showed net revenue at $1.875 million—a 41% slide year-over-year—and a net loss of $10.125 million. As of Dec. 31, cash on hand had dwindled to $268,000. The company flagged “substantial doubt” about staying afloat without new funding.

Holders may also face pressure from financing moves. According to a May 7 prospectus, Leviston registered as many as 2.5 million shares for resale tied to the conversion of its promissory note—a chunk that would represent roughly 23.94% of outstanding Class A shares as of April 16, if all the shares hit the market, the filing said.

Mobix is stepping into a sector that’s already benefiting from substantial policy backing. Last year, MP Materials clinched a multibillion-dollar deal with the U.S. Defense Department to ramp up rare-earth magnet production—“a game changer” for the non-China market, according to Adamas Intelligence’s Ryan Castilloux. In March, Lynas Rare Earths unveiled a U.S. government supply arrangement for rare-earth oxides, with roughly $96 million in Pentagon purchases included. Reuters

Prediction-market odds highlight the uncertainty here. On Polymarket, traders are putting the chances of “rare earth export relief” for the U.S. tied to the Trump-Xi summit at just 26% by May 22, according to rules that call for an explicit announcement from China. The market isn’t limited to any one company, but it’s a clear signal that fast action still looks unlikely. Polymarket

Execution stands out as the key risk. The SPD letter isn’t binding—Mobix needs to hammer out terms and secure financing for any agreement. Its recent note amendment flagged another concern: conversions could hit current holders with more dilution, particularly if the share price drops and pushes the conversion price down, which would mean more new shares.

Mobix has had a bumpy ride on Nasdaq. Back in April, the company executed a 1-for-10 reverse split to get its share price up, and after that, Nasdaq confirmed Mobix was back in line with the $1 minimum bid requirement.

Right now, Mobix is seen more as a niche, leveraged bet on defense supply-chain reshoring than a full-fledged rare-earth player. Investors are watching for a few key developments: if SPD negotiations result in a binding deal, how Mobix plans to finance it, and whether the company can translate the critical minerals boom into steady revenue.

Khadija Saeed is a financial markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and emerging industries. She studied economics and finance at the London School of Economics and previously worked in market research before moving into financial journalism. Her coverage focuses on the companies, innovations and economic trends influencing global investors.

Stock Market Updates

Micron, Qualcomm lift chip stocks after hours as Nasdaq slips

Micron, Qualcomm lift chip stocks after hours as Nasdaq slips

25 June 2026
Micron soared 16.34% after hours as customers locked in nearly $100 billion in future supply obligations—about 2.4 times its latest quarterly revenue—fueling a $400 billion surge in chip stocks and reversing the tech selloff that erased over $1 trillion from the Nasdaq 100 this week.
Western Digital falls after AI-storage rally, investors look to Micron

Western Digital falls after AI-storage rally, investors look to Micron

25 June 2026
Western Digital (NASDAQ:WDC) shares dropped about 4% after a multi-week rally fueled by AI storage demand, as investors awaited Micron Technology’s earnings for new signals on enterprise storage spending; analysts cite a persistent hard-disk supply deficit that could support pricing into 2027, with Morgan Stanley raising its price target to $650.
BlackBerry falls with volume outpacing buyback plan ahead of earnings

BlackBerry falls with volume outpacing buyback plan ahead of earnings

25 June 2026
BlackBerry closed down 2.3% at $8.62 despite Stifel initiating coverage with a Buy and $12 target—39% above the close—while trading volume of 38.3 million shares far exceeded its entire buyback authorization, highlighting investor focus ahead of Thursday’s Q1 results and underscoring the limited impact of BlackBerry’s capital return plan.
Opendoor slides after landing in Russell 3000, liquidity and dilution concerns follow

Opendoor edges up before Russell 3000 move, soft housing numbers weigh

25 June 2026
Santos shares closed down 0.96% at A$7.24 after Brent crude slumped US$3.34 to US$73.74, cutting potential annual gross sales from its new Pikka project by about US$50 million at plateau rates; Pikka’s ramp to 80,000 barrels per day is key, as oil price swings now have a direct impact on Santos’ production-linked revenue and its US$2.5 billion net debt reduction target.
Sivers Semiconductors Stock: Nasdaq Push Faces Restated Losses and a New Deadline
Previous Story

Sivers Semiconductors Stock: Nasdaq Push Faces Restated Losses and a New Deadline

Plug Power Stock Drops Again: The $5 Billion Hydrogen Turnaround Faces Its Cash Test
Next Story

Plug Power Stock Drops Again: The $5 Billion Hydrogen Turnaround Faces Its Cash Test

Go toTop