Highlights
- Simply Wall St's DCF model suggests USAR is undervalued at $13.84 vs. $31.93 fair value, but relies on aggressive timing assumptions for the pre-revenue Round Top project.
- USAR faces significant execution risks with ~$39M EBITDA losses, $285M net losses, and unproven midstream processing capabilities needed to bridge the mine-to-magnet gap.
- Investors should demand clarity on:
- Revenue timelines
- Offtake agreements
- Remaining capex
- Dilution risks
A recent USA Rare Earth (NASDAQ: USAR) analysis (opens in a new tab) by Simply Wall St argues the stock may be โundervaluedโ after a modest rebound, citing a discounted cash flow (DCF) fair value near $31.93 versus a current share price around $13.84. For retail investors, the headline is tempting. At Rare Earth Exchanges (REEx), our role is to stress-test that claim against the realities of rare earth developmentโand the hard lessons of rebuilding a U.S. supply chain.
What Simply Wall St Gets Right
Simply Wall St is transparent about the mechanics of its DCF and candid that USAR remains loss-making with no current revenue. The analysis correctly flags execution risk at the Round Top project and acknowledges that valuation is driven by future growth assumptions, not present cash flow. That honesty matters and distinguishes analysis from outright promotion.
Where the Valuation Leans Promotional
The DCFโs implied โundervaluationโ rests on aggressive timing and scale assumptionsโexactly where rare earth projects most often slip. Round Top remains pre-revenue, and moving from resource to production requires permitting, significant capex, processing validation, and firm downstream offtake. Any delay materially compresses the DCF. In short, the model prices success early and discounts risk lightly.
That raises uncomfortable but necessary questions: How development-ready is the asset today? How credible is downstream refining? The acquisition of Less Common Metals may help strategically, but integration, scale, and economics remain unproven.
REEx Reality Check: Fundamentals
- Financials: EBITDA (โ$39M) and net losses (โ$285M TTM) highlight ongoing cash burn. While cash (~$258M) provides runway, it does not eliminate dilution or execution risk.
- Balance Sheet: Minimal debt is a positive, but negative book valueโcommon for developersโremains a caution.
- Operations: The real bottleneck is not mining alone; it is processing and magnet-grade conversion, where China still dominates. USARโs thesis strengthens only if it demonstrates credible midstream execution and secure, bankable offtake.
Technicals: Momentum vs. Overhead
- Trend: Shares remain below the 50-day ($18.9) and hover near the 200-day ($14.4). This is not a confirmed uptrend.
- Volatility: A 52-week range from ~$5.56 to ~$43.98 signals speculation-heavy trading.
- Short Interest: ~13% of float short suggests persistent market skepticism.
The Unanswered Questions Investors Should Ask
- What is the realistic timeline to first revenueโand to steady-state processing? (Recent guidance compressed timelines.)
- How binding are offtake agreements, and at what pricing?
- What capex remains unfunded, and what dilution scenarios are plausible?
- How defensible is USARโs processing pathway versus entrenched Chinese midstream capacity?
Bottom Line
Simply Wall Stโs math is internally consistentโbut optimistic. REExโs assessment is that USAR is an option on execution, not a value stock today. If the U.S. is serious about rebuilding its rare earth supply chain, developers must clear the mine-to-magnet gap until USAR demonstrates that leap, valuation models should be treated as scenario analysis, not a destination.
Source: Simply Wall St, โUSA Rare Earth (USAR) Valuation: Assessing Potential Upside After Recent Share Price Rebound.โ
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