$14.68+0.43 (+3.02%)
REalloys Inc.
REalloys Inc. in the Basic Materials sector is trading at $14.68 with a market capitalization of $995M. Wall Street consensus targets $19.00 (1 analysts), implying a +29.4% move over the next 12 months. The stock is currently 45% below its 52-week high of $26.90, remaining 41.0% above its 200-day moving average. On fundamentals, Piotroski 2/9 flags weak fundamentals, Altman Z in the safe zone. The Whystock Score of 90/100 reflects bullish alignment across trend, valuation and analyst targets.
| Metric (USD) | Q1 2026 | Q1 2025 |
|---|---|---|
| Total Revenue | $706,000 | $0 |
| Gross Profit | $407,000 | $0 |
| Operating Income | -$87.66M↓ | -$867,000 |
| Net Income | -$106.72M↓ | -$1.74M |
REalloys Inc. operates as a rare earth metals and permanent magnet company in North America. The company produces rare earth metals, such as neodymium, praseodymium, dysprosium, terbium, samarium, gadolinium, yttrium, and scandium; and magnets, such ...
Strategic U.S. Army Partnership: REalloys (NASDAQ-ALOY) has been conditionally selected to operate a long-term Enhanced Use Lease to design, finance, build, and operate heavy rare earth processing facilities at the Tooele Army Depot, Utah as part of the first commercial critical-mineral processing award on a Government military installation, by way of a direct execution of Executive Order 14241. Expedited 2027 Timeline and Cap-Ex Light Approach: Development targeted as early as 2027, with Initial Operating Capability targeted no later than 2028 to align with the January 1, 2027, US federal procurement ban on Chinese materials in the Defense Industrial Manufacturing Base. The partnership is expected to be delivered through an Enhanced Use Lease that is expected to require no taxpayer subsidies.
June 25 (Reuters) - Canadian miner Titan Mining and U.S.-based REalloys said on Thursday they were selected by the U.S. Army to develop processing facilities for critical minerals.
Titan Mining (TII) subsidiary Empire State Mines received conditional selection notices from the US
The agreement with mining companies is part of the Trump administration’s push to establish a domestic supply chain for vital industrial inputs.
In August 2024, China sparked a crisis by restricting antimony exports; now, they are doing the same to rare earths… but this time, one company saw it coming.