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Lynas Rare Earths, Ltd. is an Australian rare-earths mining company with two major operations: a mining and concentration plant at Mount Weld in Western Australia, and the Lynas Advanced Materials Plant (LAMP) in Kuantan, Malaysia. [1] The company was founded in the 1990s and is headquartered in Perth, Western Australia.
The stock of Lynas Rare Earths (OTCPK:LYSCF, 30-year Financials) gives every indication of being significantly overvalued, according to GuruFocus Value calculation.
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Most readers would already be aware that Lynas Rare Earths' (ASX:LYC) stock increased significantly by 51% over the...
MP Materials and Australia's Lynas held a confidential discussion regarding a potential merger which fell through on February 5, 2024. [28] Lynas is the second largest rare earth material company outside of China. As of 2024, CEO James Litinsky was the company's largest shareholder. [29]
In response to the opening of new mines in other countries (Lynas in Australia and Molycorp in the United States), prices of rare earths dropped. [62] The price of dysprosium oxide was US$994/kg in 2011, but dropped to US$265/kg by 2014.
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The Mount Weld deposit is owned by ASX-listed Lynas Corporation, [6] which raised A$450 million equity from J. P. Morgan in 2009 [7] to fund the development of a mine and also a processing plant in Kuantan, Malaysia. Once operational, the Mount Weld mine is expected to be the largest source of rare-earth elements outside of China. [citation needed]