Lunch Wrap: ASX cruises as CATL mine closure sends lithium into overdrive
JB Hi-Fi and Car Group CEOs call time
Capstone, Eagers and DroneShield drop big moves
By Monday lunchtime in the east, the ASX was cruising 0.25% higher, catching a lift from Wall Street's record-breaking finish on Friday.
Bitcoin is also up 4% in the past 24 hours and closing in on its all time high again, while altcoins have been buzzing, too, after Ripple's US$200 million Rail acquisition sent XRP, Ethereum and Solana higher.
But it was the mining sector doing most of the heavy lifting this morning, mostly because lithium just found itself a fresh jolt of adrenaline.
There's been a lithium frenzy after a major Chinese mine shut its gates.
Reports said the world's biggest EV battery maker, CATL, has let a key mining permit lapse.
And when the mine you're shutting has been a significant source of lithium supply in China – the world's processing powerhouse – the market hits the panic button.
Traders are now bracing for a short-term squeeze in feedstock, and every lithium stock is riding the sugar high this morning.
Pilbara Minerals (ASX:PLS) and Liontown Resources (ASX:LTR) jumped around 14% and 18% respectively on the news.
In other large cap news, JB HiFi (ASX:JBH) dipped 9% despite a result that beat expectations and came with a shareholder payday.
The bad news was CEO Terry Smart said he will step down after more than two decades, handing the reins to COO Nick Wells.
CAR Group (ASX:CAR) (formerly Carsales) rose 1% on a 10% jump in NPAT to $275 million, a final dividend of 41.5¢, and guidance for double-digit earnings growth next year.
Outgoing CEO Cameron McIntyre leaves after 18 years with the company, having built an international classifieds empire across the globe.
DroneShield (ASX:DRO) added 0.5% after launching SentryCiv, a subscription-based AI counter-drone system for civilian infrastructure like airports and utilities.
Still in large caps, Eagers Automotive (ASX:APE) announced a non-binding MoU with Mitsubishi Corporation to explore growth in dealerships, finance, fleet, and crucially, "new energy" vehicles. Shares were down 1%.
Finally, Capstone Copper Corp (ASX:CSC) confirmed a US$176 million expansion of its Mantoverde project in Chile, set to lift copper output by 20,000 tonnes a year once fully ramped in 2027. CSC's chares rallied 5%.
ASX LEADERS
Today's best performing stocks (including small caps) intraday:
Security Description Last % Volume MktCap
ETM Energy Transition 0.115 109% 42,924,519 $85,327,477
BP8 Bph Global Ltd 0.002 100% 498,187 $1,050,985
DAL Dalaroometalsltd 0.038 52% 1,896,683 $6,491,298
LNU Linius Tech Limited 0.002 50% 19,013,171 $6,501,216
PAB Patrys Limited 0.002 50% 881,202 $2,365,810
PLC Premier1 Lithium Ltd 0.008 33% 4,731,318 $2,208,363
BCC Beam Communications 0.155 29% 120,000 $10,370,631
BCN Beacon Minerals 1.670 29% 330,868 $136,831,237
FNR Far Northern Res 0.175 25% 71,142 $5,637,216
BYH Bryah Resources Ltd 0.005 25% 3,714,500 $4,114,130
MRD Mount Ridley Mines 0.003 25% 630,084 $1,556,978
EPM Eclipse Metals 0.027 23% 26,489,816 $65,981,352
ADO Anteotech Ltd 0.028 22% 11,187,346 $62,221,907
GBZ GBM Rsources Ltd 0.034 21% 4,228,579 $39,644,111
ZEO Zeotech Limited 0.071 20% 11,152,663 $110,933,456
ADY Admiralty Resources. 0.006 20% 295,279 $13,147,397
SER Strategic Energy 0.006 20% 166,666 $4,183,458
SPQ Superior Resources 0.006 20% 4,794,499 $11,854,914
TFL Tasfoods Ltd 0.006 20% 684,735 $2,185,478
LTR Liontown Resources 1.008 19% 38,298,742 $2,052,847,208
MPK Many Peaks Minerals 0.860 19% 763,708 $88,748,959
FL1 First Lithium Ltd 0.125 19% 117,331 $8,363,628
BPH Global (ASX:BP8) says its R&D partner TPIH will run extra assays on naturally growing seaweed Sesuvium portulacastrum, to check its knack for hoarding gold, silver and rare earths. It's a freebie for the company, building on earlier work that showed the species can pack high-value metals into its biomass. The fresh tests will help confirm whether wild-grown seaweed matches or beats the metal content seen in cultivated samples, bolstering its case as a future source of 'bio-ore.
Linius Technologies (ASX:LNU) has secured its first sale of Captivate to long-time partner Honest Technology Partners in a deal worth over $250k. The two-year contract will see Captivate used to give ice hockey fans personalised, TikTok-style highlight reels from entire video archives, helping rights-holders boost engagement and monetise directly. The agreement runs through to July 2027, with scope to grow if more games are added.
Beacon Minerals (ASX:BCN) has wrapped up its biggest-ever RC drill program at the Lady Ida Iguana deposit, punching 298 holes for 16,506 metres to firm up confidence ahead of first production early next year. The first 2,970 assays are back, showing standout hits like 6 metres at 46.8 g/t gold and 5 metres at 39.3 g/t, with some intercepts over 100 g/t. The remaining 13,500 results are due in the next two months, and the high-grade Northwest corridor has Beacon eyeing deeper follow-up drilling.
ASX LAGGARDS
Today's worst performing stocks (including small caps) intraday:
Code Name Price % Change Volume Market Cap
SNT Syntara Limited 0.031 -46% 45,724,768 $92,775,383
AOK Australian Oil. 0.002 -33% 1,171,757 $3,113,349
MTL Mantle Minerals Ltd 0.001 -33% 655 $9,671,169
BUX Buxton Resources Ltd 0.029 -31% 8,771,685 $14,431,448
AQX Alice Queen Ltd 0.003 -25% 2,500 $5,538,785
GTR Gti Energy Ltd 0.003 -25% 1,895,616 $14,890,619
JAY Jayride Group 0.003 -25% 983,469 $5,711,556
EQS Equitystorygroupltd 0.020 -20% 126,964 $4,170,510
AYM Australia United Min 0.002 -20% 500 $4,606,444
MSI Multistack Internat. 0.004 -20% 89,033 $681,520
PGY Pilot Energy Ltd 0.009 -18% 8,523,886 $23,745,260
HTG Harvest Tech Grp Ltd 0.015 -17% 485,790 $16,362,330
CRR Critical Resources 0.005 -17% 23,405 $16,620,513
SHP South Harz Potash 0.003 -17% 200,000 $4,415,170
TKL Traka Resources 0.003 -17% 15,024,534 $7,266,417
TMX Terrain Minerals 0.003 -17% 1,154,239 $7,595,443
VAR Variscan Mines Ltd 0.005 -17% 7,622,922 $4,697,146
NVQ Noviqtech Limited 0.036 -14% 1,881,216 $10,564,535
TON Triton Min Ltd 0.006 -14% 300,000 $10,978,721
TSL Titanium Sands Ltd 0.006 -14% 43,500 $16,413,230
PER Percheron 0.010 -14% 3,247,727 $11,961,814
GT3 G360 Technologies 0.028 -13% 761,201 $32,304,493
Last Orders
AnteoTech (ASX:ADO) has taken in $2.59m in cash from the ATO from a research and development tax incentive for the activities across both its advanced battery tech and life science divisions.
An acceleration for the incentive was a key outcome highlighted in a recent strategic review and refreshed strategy which has prioritised a commercial rollout of AnteoTech's advanced technologies across key global markets.
Sovereign Metals (ASX:SVM) has finalised its mining method and fleet design and capped off another key input for the ongoing definitive feasibility work at its Kasiya rutile-graphite project in Malawi.
The fleet has been specifically engineered for large-scale dry mining operations, and Sovereign CEO Frank Eagar said its successful validation has enabled it to design a fleet that delivers on a commitment to industry-leading low operating costs while maintaining exceptional flexibility and reliability.
DY6 Metals (ASX:DY6) has validated the high-quality nature of oversized natural rutile nuggets recently found at its Central rutile project in Cameroon with XRF results coming in at an average of 95.64% titanium dioxide.
CEO Cliff Fitzhenry said both the high levels of titanium and low impurities suggest a premium quality, and that the array of lab results provide an excellent foundation for real-time geochemical analysis and delivering low cost, rapid assay turnaround times for future exploration.
West Wits Mining (ASX:WWI) has completed the buy-back of a 10% minority interest and raised the interest in its 5Moz Witwatersrand Basin project in South Africa from 66.6% to 74%.
West Wits considers the deal as a value accretive one, particularly considering a recent DFS which outlined the project as quite the golden prize with a post-tax net present value of US$500m.
Horseshoe Metals (ASX:HOR) has appointed copper mining expert Steve Sickerdick as GM of oxide copper operations to facilitate a direct shipping ore start-up at the historic Horseshoe Lights mine just 60km westward of the legendary DeGrussa copper and gold mine.
Horseshoe believes the project still remains both underexplored and underdeveloped, and director and CFO Kate Stoney said the company was delighted to welcome such an experienced operator as it enters an exciting phase in its evolution as an emerging copper developer.
RareX (ASX:REE) has commissioned a consultancy firm to conduct early-stage community engagement for its Mrima Hill critical minerals project in Kenya.
Managing director James Durrant said the company was confident its consortium with Iluka offers the strongest delivery model for the project, but it had to first earn the trust of local communities, and that leading East African firm AWEMAC's deep local experience would ensure a mutually confidence-building process.
In Case You Missed It
Power Minerals (ASX:PNN) has completed its due diligence over Santa Anna and is now all set to acquire the Brazilian niobium-rare earths project and enhance its position as a South American-focused explorer and developer of clean energy metals.
Greenvale Energy (ASX:GRV) has swollen the footprint of its Douglas River uranium project by 70% and further backed its belief in the prospectivity of the Northern Territory's Pine Creek region as it prepares to start of exploration.
Belararox (ASX:BRX) is gearing up to drill in Botswana later this month on its hunt for the next big discovery in the Kalahari Copper Belt.
At Stockhead, we tell it like it is. While AnteoTech, Sovereign Metals, DY6 Metals, West Wits Mining, Horseshoe Metals and RareX are Stockhead advertisers, they did not sponsor this article.

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12 minutes ago
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Some teachers are fighting AI, but is there a case that it can work with them?
There's no doubt that Australian teachers would like to have more time. Some tasks, including reviewing just one student assessment, can take teachers up to 30 to 40 minutes to complete. But what if there were a tool that could do the same work in mere seconds? Generative artificial intelligence (AI) tools, like ChatGPT, present opportunities for greater efficiency in a variety of different sectors. And while AI's ability to produce realistic, human-like content has long sparked concerns about its impact on students' learning, a framework exists in Australia to guide the responsible and ethical use of it in ways that benefit students, schools, and society. Tech giants have also accelerated their plans to embed generative AI in our education systems. Microsoft, OpenAI and Anthropic recently announced they were funding a $US23 million ($35 million) AI teaching hub in New York for educators, to help them learn how to better integrate AI tools in classrooms. So could there be a future where generative AI is embraced in schools, more than it's feared? After ChatGPT was launched by OpenAI in November 2022, education departments across Australia swiftly banned its use by students. There were concerns that, due to the sophistication of the tool, it would be difficult to detect when students were using AI to plagiarise content "Students have certainly taken to the technology very quickly. The concern, of course, is that this genie is not going back in the bottle," David Braue, a technology journalist at Cybercrime Magazine, tells ABC Radio National's Download This Show. The Australian Framework for Generative AI in Schools was released by the federal government in late 2023 to address the challenges and opportunities presented by these tools to teachers and students. There is a plan to review the framework annually. But RMIT computing professor Michael Cowling says we need to consider the opportunities these tools present as well. 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Adelaide Botanic High School uses EdChat today, and principal Sarah Chambers says that she is grateful to be working in a school that engages with this issue differently. "I think the thing I appreciate about the approach is to not shy away from this challenge, to really look to the reality that this is a technology that will influence how we work, from now and into the future, because it's not going anywhere," she says. "And to acknowledge that and create a tool that responds to some of the challenges that we do know exist around AI." Other challenges, besides plagiarism, include ensuring the security of students' data and filtering content that is presented to students adequately. The EdChat tool being used in South Australia includes safety features to address these challenges, including a content filter that the department says "blocks inappropriate requests". While generative AI is a challenge for educators, it's not dissimilar to issues they have always faced. "For teachers to design assessments of learning that are genuinely capturing a student's growth is a high-level skill," Ms Chambers says. As Australian schools cautiously embrace AI tools, another challenge could be that teachers will rely on AI too much. Professor Cowlings believes "it's okay for [teachers] to be reliant on AI as long as they understand how to use it". Mr Braue says that isn't enough to safeguard against the risks. "Even if they know how to use it, they [teachers] may not be aware of their obligations for data protection," he says. Fairness of content is another issue schools must consider when it comes to AI applications, according to Mr Braue. "We know that a lot of the AI models that are out there are biased in terms of gender and ethnicity … that is a reality for these models," he says. "So teachers need to be very aware that what they're producing needs to be objectively looked at through these lenses… It can't just be about getting stuff done faster." Following South Australia's AI trial, several states and territories have announced their own, including Queensland, Western Australia and New South Wales. But this approach is not adequate, according to the Productivity Commission (PC). It handed down an interim report last week recommending that AI integration in schools needs to be Australia-wide. "A national approach would aid innovation, support equal access to high-quality tools, and spread the benefits to all," the report stated. Ms Chambers says generative AI is a tool that schools need to adapt to quickly. She says she hopes future expansion of these tools is based on feedback from schools, like Adelaide Botanic, which have been using it for some time."We should be listening to the voices of people who are leading in this work, but also ensure that we've got opportunities to share that emerging work that's happening on the ground." Ms Chambers says that it's important students learn how to navigate generative AI tools for their futures. "We know the access to the knowledge is there, but their ability to understand what is good quality information, what is valid information, reliable sources, this presents a really broad perspective or ethical moral consideration of the issue at hand. "Those thinking skills and creativity skills, they are even more important than ever."

ABC News
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Gippsland forum hears how the private sector can help house the homeless
On any given night, Australia's 122,000 homeless people are either sleeping rough outdoors, in their cars or couch surfing. All while thousands of dormant and vacant public and commercial buildings across the country sit empty. It is an irony not lost on Robert Pradolin, founder and executive director of. "Like most Australians, I assumed that our governments were looking after our vulnerable people and I discovered that they weren't," he said. Mr Pradolin, a former civil engineer, has spent the past decade rallying a growing number of like-minded "compassionate capitalists" from the private sector to donate their skills, labour and building supplies to an ever-growing slate of housing projects. It became Housing All Australians (HAA), a national not-for-profit working with the private sector to repurpose dormant and vacant buildings into temporary or long-term housing for people at risk of homelessness. "The first project we did in South Melbourne in 2016 with Metricon, their subcontractors refurbished 32 rooms of a 52-room facility," he said. Since then, HAA has gifted 100,000 nights of free accommodation to not-for-profit crisis accommodation providers by repurposing nine buildings across Australia, including a dormant convent, an aged care facility, hotel, and rooming house. Mr Pradolin wants the public, private and community sectors to work together to find compromises and solutions to further issues such as zoning, permits, compliance and land tax. Mr Pradolin recently travelled to Victoria's Gippsland region, in the state's south-east, for a forum aimed at tackling growing levels of homelessness there. Of the 64,117 households on Victoria's statewide social housing waiting list, 7,520 are in Gippsland. Quantum Support Services general manager and Gippsland Homelessness Network chair Mitchell Burney said the pandemic had accelerated an unprecedented homelessness situation. This in a region already under-resourced with adequate emergency accommodation and outreach workers. With 3,644 households accessing homelessness services across Gippsland in 2024–25, Mr Burney said the actual number of homeless was likely to be double, as many people did not access services or did not know they existed. He said there had been a 32 per cent increase in rough sleeping from 2023–24 across Gippsland, with 572 known rough sleepers living outdoors, in tents, under bridges or in their cars. With a six-month wait for homelessness case management support in the Latrobe Valley, he said there was an urgent need for dormant buildings to be repurposed as pop-up housing across regional Victoria. "At Quantum, we're starting to see middle-income people and employed people coming through," Mr Burney said. "We have a real youth homelessness problem here in Gippsland as well." Besides single women over 55, he said men and women aged 26–44, some with small families, were also at risk. With median rents increasing by 50 per cent over the last five years, Sale-based real estate agent Lisa Wegener said she often referred clients to support services that could assist with bond, relocation and rental payments. She said she also worked with single women who may have had a relationship breakdown or situational change who were forced to confront a shortage of available rentals. Ms Wegener would like to see more investor incentives created to encourage the construction of affordable one-bedroom rentals for single people on Centrelink incomes. She said compliance legislation and land tax had forced small-time property investors out of the market and she had sold off 10 per cent of her rental roll. "There's just a lot more costs involved," she said. "Gas and electrical compliance checks, insurance is going up, everything's gone up, and it's just not viable for them to keep their investment property. "This then means, unfortunately, there's less rental properties on the market." In response, Sale has now been earmarked for a Housing All Australians project. The organisation has put out a call to tradespeople, businesses, local councillors and commercial property owners to discuss the potential for creating a pop-up shelter from one of the shire's numerous vacant buildings. Mr Pradolin warned of a "lose-lose" scenario for the private sector, with disastrous socio-economic effects, if emergency, short-term and long-term affordable housing supply were not urgently addressed. In his campaign to educate the private sector, Mr Pradolin said it was important to look at homelessness through an economic lens. "It starts with the lack of housing for essential workers," he said. "You push people out of an area because there is not enough housing supply to put downward pressure on price. "What happens then when all our workers can't live close to where they work? "They're living further and further away to a point where they're so far away that they say, 'I'm not going to come in'. "This is a productivity issue for Australia."

ABC News
an hour ago
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Red tape is leading to more expensive houses and sicker Australians, industry says
For many people in Australia, the way things are in the economy may be as good as it gets for some time. When the Reserve Bank cut interest rates last week, it also provided updated economic forecasts which anticipate weaker consumer spending, lower pay rises and declining business profits in the years ahead. Essentially, the RBA is saying falling productivity will contribute to weaker growth and a handbrake on living standards in Australia. Indeed, the 'P word' has become a serious enough concern that the federal government has made it the main agenda item for its 'economic round table' on Tuesday. While unions want initiatives like a four-day work week and flexible working arrangements to be front of mind during the economic 'talkfest' in Canberra, business groups are lobbying for a 25 per cent reduction in regulatory 'red tape' by 2030. The ABC has spoken with a few businesses — large and small — on what improvements they would like to see in regards to productivity and economic conditions in Australia. One of the major problems for construction companies is different rules for workers in each state and territory, according to Lendlease's chief executive Tony Lombardo. "In some states, it's a flexible RDO [rostered day off] regime, and in other states, it's fixed," he said in an interview with The Business host Kirsten Aiken. "So what that means, on a flexible regime is we can keep the site open all the time and manage those RDOs over time — versus if it's a fixed site RDO, we have to close down the whole project. So things like that impact productivity." Mr Lombardo also wants to see more "harmonisation" across the states' building regulations, which he says will make a "big difference" for his industry. "If we constantly have change with those codes, it just makes it complex to follow the rules and execute." He also identified Australia's "aging workforce" as a problem, and the lack of skilled labour compared to a decade ago. "Post-COVID, we had a lot of people leave the industry, so I'd love to see things [initiatives] around apprenticeships," he said. "I hear that some of the states are starting to focus on that, so it'd actually be great to really put some effort behind how we train and upskill. "And if we can't get the people, we've got to think about migration, getting immigrants or skilled labour into our construction industry." Andre Ransom — the owner of a Sydney construction business, Kestrel Building — says there are certain regulations that are driving up costs for smaller builders, which lead to more costs being passed onto the consumer, and therefore higher property prices. One issue he identified was the fact that construction employees receive more generous redundancy payouts compared to workers in other sectors. "If an employee who has worked for you for less than a year decides to resign and work for another building company, he's entitled to redundancy unless he has engaged in gross malpractice," Mr Ransom said. "I know of no other industry with rules like that." For most other industries, employees are not entitled to a redundancy if they worked at the business for less than a year, according to the Fair Work Act. In addition, they'll only receive this payout if the employer terminated their role (generally, against the worker's will in most cases). In comparison, a building and construction employee is entitled to a redundancy payment — even if they were they resign voluntarily. That's because the term "redundancy" is defined as "ceasing to be employed" (which is broader than being "terminated", as the Fair Work Act requires). "To run construction costs a lot of money, and so many have gone bust. It's never been harder to try and grow," Mr Ransom said. Matthew Britland, a former nurse who has led numerous pharmaceutical companies, views the productivity debate from a different angle. "The health problems we have as a nation are having a major impact on productivity in the workplace, as people with avoidable diseases are off for long periods of time," he said. "Governments tend to approach healthcare as if it were a 'cost', as opposed to an 'investment', and often doesn't see the long-term productivity gains." As examples, he cited the Australian government's relatively slow approval of new treatments compared to other regions like the United States and Europe. After the TGA (Therapeutic Goods Administration) approves a new medicine, it's up to a government body called the PBAC (Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee) to decide whether the taxpayer should subsidise it. "Australia is one of the slowest jurisdictions to reimburse new medicines. There's a gap of around 680 days between when the TGA approves something, and when the government decides to foot the bill for it. "The only way you can get equity of care in Australia is to get reimbursed for medicines. "While we have some of the best outcomes in world, they're nowhere where they should be, and this results in patients being forced to use older, less effective therapies, and have to take more time off work."