Gina Rinehart is in a prime playmaker role.
Rinehart’s Lynas share play brings to two the number of rare earth companies in which she has taken a key equity position this month alone. Earlier in the month,Rinehart took a similar-sized stake in rare earth miner MP Materials.
Through her privately owned Hancock Prospecting,Rinehart has outlaid $49 million on the Lynas holding – chump change for someone sitting on a fortune of roughly $37 billion at last count,but it has given her a crucial gatekeeper say in how the industry will develop.
Lynas and MP Materials held merger discussions earlier this year,but a deal failed to materialise. However,Rinehart’s share raid on Lynas this week will ignite speculation that a deal between two of the largest rare earths groups outside China might be back on the agenda.
That puts her in a prime playmaker role.
Rare earths are not investments for the faint-hearted. Like many critical minerals,including nickel and lithium,prices have not been owner-friendly.
Both Lynas and MP are developing rare earth processing facilities in Texas,with those plants being designed to displace Chinese finished products from the rare earth supply chain.
Lynas’US government funding more than doubled last year as the Biden administration accelerated its mission to secure supplies of rare earths.