MP Materials caught a bid on Wednesday, with shares rising 3.4% to close at $60.17. The move came on lighter volume than usual, with about 5.85 million shares changing hands compared to the typical 10.88 million.
MP Materials Corp., MP
The stock has been on analysts’ radar lately. Multiple firms upgraded their outlook on the rare-earth metals producer in recent weeks. Jefferies bumped MP from hold to buy with an $80 price target back in August. BMO Capital followed suit, moving to outperform despite trimming their target from $76 to $75.
Goldman Sachs jumped in with new coverage and a buy rating. Deutsche Bank also upgraded from hold to buy, setting a $77 target. Not everyone is convinced though. Wall Street Zen downgraded the stock to sell in mid-November.
Right now, 15 analysts cover MP Materials. Twelve rate it a buy, one says strong buy, one holds, and one recommends selling. The average price target sits at $78.73, which would give shares about 35% room to run from current levels. The most optimistic analyst sees the stock hitting $112.
The company mines and processes rare-earth materials at its Mountain Pass facility in California. These materials are crucial for defense applications, electric vehicles, and renewable energy technology. MP is working on vertical integration from mining through magnet production.
Third quarter results showed MP lost 10 cents per share. That beat Wall Street’s expectation of a 15-cent loss. Revenue came in at $53.55 million, topping the $49.72 million estimate but down 14.9% from last year.
The company is burning cash. Net margin was negative 50.6% in the quarter. Return on equity was negative 7.7%. Analysts expect MP to lose 19 cents per share for the full year.
The balance sheet shows some strength. MP has a current ratio of 8.05 and a quick ratio of 7.51. Debt-to-equity stands at 0.47. The company has room to operate even as it works toward profitability.
Company insiders have been selling this year. COO Michael Rosenthal sold 150,000 shares in late August at $72.02 each, pocketing $10.8 million. He still owns 1.28 million shares worth about $92.5 million.
CEO James Litinsky sold 248,411 shares in November at $63.86 per share for $15.9 million. He owns 13.37 million shares valued at $853.8 million after the sale. Combined, insiders unloaded 418,411 shares worth $27.8 million in the third quarter.
Insiders still own 12.6% of the company. The sales represented relatively small portions of their holdings. Rosenthal’s sale was a 10.5% reduction. Litinsky’s was 1.8%.
Institutional investors have been net buyers. Rockefeller Capital Management boosted its position by 132.7% in Q2, adding 100,915 shares to bring its total to 176,984 shares. Several new funds initiated positions during the quarter. Institutions now own 52.55% of shares outstanding.
The stock trades at $60.17 with a market cap of $10.66 billion. Its 50-day moving average is $68.33. The 200-day sits at $54.86. The stock has a beta of 2.26, meaning it moves more than twice as much as the broader market.
Analysts highlight MP’s alignment with U.S. national security priorities. The company’s domestic rare-earth production reduces reliance on foreign suppliers, particularly China. Government contracts and support provide revenue visibility. Profitability is expected in fiscal 2026 as the company scales production and moves downstream into magnet manufacturing.
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