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ASX Runners of the Week: Norwood, Cauldron, 1414 Degrees & Red Metal

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This week’s Bulls N’ Bears ASX Runner of the Week is… Norwood Systems.
Camera IconThis week’s Bulls N’ Bears ASX Runner of the Week is… Norwood Systems. Credit: Bulls N' Bears/File

Perfect timing.

As news landed that the US was inching towards a peace deal with Iran and the FIFA World Cup kicked off, the long-awaited SpaceX IPO finally launched, in what can only be described as a roaring success.

The float was always expected to be enormous, but few anticipated quite how quickly investors would lose their minds.

Shares issued at US$135 (A$190) apiece at IPO opened at US$160 (A$225) and didn’t look back. By Tuesday, SpaceX had surged to almost US$230 (A$310) a share in after-hours trading, adding more than US$1 trillion (A$1.4 trillion) of value in less than a week and sending the world’s first trillionaire, Elon Musk, $1 trillion ahead of his next-closest rival.

Investors aren’t apparently buying today’s earnings; they’re buying tomorrow’s possibilities.

Even Australia’s richest person is buying in. Mining magnate Gina Rinehart lavished praise on Musk this week, saying he had “not just imagined the future, he has built companies capable of delivering it”. The glowing praise turned a little more self-congratulatory after she revealed an investment of more than US$1 billion (A$1.41 billion) in SpaceX. At one point during the week, her paper profits had swelled by more than A$700 million.

Meanwhile, the broader share market found another reason to celebrate. After weeks of missile strikes, tanker scares and breathless headlines surrounding the Strait of Hormuz, Trump finally unveiled what he described as a peace deal with Iran. Skeptics were quick to point out the agreement looked suspiciously like a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with very little actual ink attached to it, but markets weren’t interested in the fine print.

Instead, investors focused on the one thing they could measure immediately: oil prices.

Crude suffered one of its ugliest weeks in recent memory on news of a move towards full reopening of the Strait of Hormuz. The energy benchmark plunged more than 10 per cent at one point, making it comfortably the biggest loser across major commodities.

That collapse in oil prices immediately soothed inflation fears that had been building throughout June. With the market’s favourite pricing bellwether suddenly moving in the right direction, global equities resumed their march higher and investors once again found themselves reaching for risk.

Central bankers, however, appeared less convinced. The Reserve Bank of Australia elected to keep rates on hold this week. At the same time, the US Federal Reserve maintained its increasingly hawkish tone, warning that further tightening may still be required despite the sharp retreat in energy prices. It was a timely reminder that while markets are often happy to declare victory, policymakers generally prefer to wait for the scoreboard.

With the war seemingly cooling and oil and inflation fears fading, our attention can now shift to the weekend’s main event. The Socceroos head to Seattle looking to achieve something that neither a war in Iran nor the US Fed have managed all year - put the Americans firmly on the back foot and retreating.

With the market obsession surrounding SpaceX and its AI future implications, our Runners’ precession this week was all things AI, with a few honourable mentions from a couple of Australian-based critical minerals maestros surging on some serious potential.

NORWOOD SYSTEMS LTD (ASX: NOR)

Up 200% (0.9c – 2.7c)

Bulls N’ Bears Runner of the Week is AI-telecommunications savant Norwood Systems, after it cracked the major leagues with an inked deal to provide pilot services to a major UK telecommunications provider for its OpenSpan AI Services Orchestration Platform and CogVoice AI voice applications.

The pilot, valued at approximately £150,000 (A$285,000), will test a suite of AI-driven voice capabilities including intelligent call routing, scheduling, automated provisioning workflows, and deep analytics.

While the financial size of the agreement is relatively modest, the market response indicates a re-rating driven once again by the technology’s future scalability, rather than immediate revenue.

The AI-hungry market gobbled the news, seeing the adoption of artificial intelligence in telecommunications infrastructure as a near-term reality over whatever 6G package is no doubt on the horizon.

Its OpenSpan service is a cloud-native orchestration platform built on Microsoft Azure that bridges traditional telco networks and modern web service environments. It acts as a governing layer, allowing telecom carriers to quickly deploy AI voice features such as fraud detection, live translation, call summaries and intelligent routing.

Norwood says the deal validates its OpenSpan platform in a live UK telecom environment, signalling potential global adoption of the platform in real-world networks and that the contract has clearly influenced longer-term commercial expectations.

CAULDRON ENERGY LTD (ASX: CXU)

Up 133% (5.8c – 13.5c)

Although the uranium market may have delivered its fair share of surprises over the years, Cauldron Energy’s explosive 133 per cent run this week might be one of the more fascinating examples of passive money throwing its weight around.

The junior uranium developer lit up trading screens after a series of enormous buy orders appeared in the market, including bids reportedly worth up to $3.5 million. For a company of Cauldron’s size, that’s not exactly loose change found down the back of the couch.

The timing has investors pointing to this week’s semi-annual rebalance of Sprott’s URNJ Uranium Junior Miners ETF, which adjusts its holdings twice a year to reflect changes across the global uranium sector.

The fund’s previous rebalance in December produced some unusual moves across the junior uranium space, with smaller explorers suddenly finding themselves on the receiving end of substantial buying pressure as the ETF moved to build or increase positions.

If that’s what happened here, it would go a long way towards explaining why Cauldron’s shares suddenly caught fire.

To be fair, the company wasn’t completely devoid of news. During the week, it unveiled encouraging passive seismic survey results at its Yanrey uranium project in Western Australia, with the work helping identify potential uranium-bearing palaeochannels near its already sizeable 55.6-million-pound uranium oxide resource.

The survey is designed to improve targeting and potentially expand mineralisation beyond the project’s existing footprint, giving the market a fundamental reason to pay attention.

But while the technical update was solid enough, it’s difficult to ignore the elephant in the room. Multi-million-dollar bids don’t often materialise in junior explorers without a catalyst, and the URNJ rebalance appears the most likely explanation for the extraordinary surge in demand.

Sometimes a share price runs because of a discovery. Sometimes it runs because of a takeover. And sometimes it runs because a global ETF suddenly decides it needs stock and doesn’t particularly care what price it has to pay to get it.

A concept design of 1414 Degrees major Aurora Energy Precinct in Port Augusta, South Australia.
Camera IconA concept design of 1414 Degrees major Aurora Energy Precinct in Port Augusta, South Australia. Credit: File

1414 DEGREES LTD (ASX: 14D)

Up 260% (7c – 14.5c)

Filling out our podium this week is Runners’ regular 1414 Degrees, which lit up after investors finally began connecting the dots between the AI boom and the infrastructure needed to keep it alive.

While markets obsess over chips and software, the real bottleneck is increasingly becoming power. AI hyperscalers are now hunting for Australian sites capable of supporting 500MW-plus operations, sparking a land grab for energy-rich locations that can accommodate the next generation of data centres.

That trend has suddenly thrust 1414 Degrees’ Aurora Energy Precinct near Port Augusta into the spotlight. The project has long flown under the radar. However, with capacity to support up to 900MW of renewable generation alongside battery storage and data centre infrastructure, Aurora is starting to look like exactly the type of asset AI developers are searching for.

The company added fuel to the story this week after clearing the final technical hurdles required by the Australian Energy Market Operator for its planned 140MW/280MWh battery project. The milestone allows Aurora to enter negotiations for commercial transmission access with ElectraNet, bringing the precinct a step closer to plugging directly into South Australia’s high-voltage grid.

It might sound like dry technical paperwork, but in the race to build AI infrastructure, securing power is rapidly becoming more valuable than securing customers. And for 1414 Degrees, the market appears to be waking up to that reality.

Drilling on site at Red Metal’s unique Sybella rare earths project outside Mt Isa, Queensland.
Camera IconDrilling on site at Red Metal’s unique Sybella rare earths project outside Mt Isa, Queensland. Credit: File

RED METAL LTD (ASX: RDM)

Up 48% (12.5c – 18.5c)

Rounding out our Runners is one of the biggest breakthroughs in Australian clay-hosted rare earths news that could see a monster project become the Escondida of rare earths.

Red Metal Limited has moved a major step closer to proving a low-cost processing route for its Sybella rare earths project in Queensland, with definitive column leach tests delivering stellar recoveries from coarse-crushed ore using weak acid at room temperature.

At first glance, the complex processing lingo may not seem like a major milestone. In simple terms, however, what it means is that Red Metal and its multi-billion-tonne Sybella project can be mined, crushed, stacked and leached in a broadly similar style to the super low-cost copper heap leach operations at the world’s biggest copper mine, Escondida.

Processing is everything in rare earths and if Red Metal can prove up its heap leaching ability, this project just outside Mt Isa may become one of the biggest operations globally.

The company says standout recoveries included neodymium extractions of 71 per cent from minus-10mm saprock and 70 per cent from minus-20mm saprock, while transitional ore returned 76 per cent and 75 per cent, respectively. Praseodymium recoveries were similarly strong, running from 71 per cent to 78 per cent across the same ore types and crush sizes.

The Sybella project lies 20 kilometres south-west of Mount Isa and is built around a unique granite-hosted rare earth system that starts at surface. It has a zero-strip ratio in the early weathered material and is being assessed as a potentially simple heap leach development.

The company will now push ahead with prefeasibility work, including further column tests on a minus 30mm fraction, taller 6m columns, ion-exchange purification studies using the leach liquors and geotechnical work to help determine heap stack heights.

If Red Metal can keep converting its lab work into practical engineering numbers, its Mount Isa rare earths push may have just taken a meaningful stride from clever concept towards a major mining operation.

Is your ASX-listed company doing something interesting? Contact: matt.birney@wanews.com.au

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