STOCK TITAN

5E Advanced Materials Signs Third Offtake Heads of Agreement for Fort Cady

(Very Positive)
Tags

5E Advanced Materials (NASDAQ:FEAM) signed its third commercial offtake heads of agreement for the Fort Cady Integrated Boron Facility, this time with a U.S. cellulose insulation company. The HOA covers boric acid and calcium sulphate, with a 5+5 year term, 5,000–8,000 short tons annually, take-or-pay on the minimum volume, supporting Fort Cady’s bankability and project financing discussions.

Loading...
Loading translation...

Positive

  • HOA for 5,000–8,000 short tons annually with take-or-pay minimum
  • Initial 5-year term plus automatic 5-year renewal for potential 10-year duration
  • Third commercial offtake milestone in about 60 days
  • Agreements span cellulose insulation and industrial end-use markets
  • Domestic customers securing U.S.-based boric acid supply from Fort Cady
  • Management views diversified customer base as supporting project financing

Negative

  • HOA remains subject to negotiation and execution of definitive purchase agreement
  • One commercial pipeline item is only a non-binding indication of interest
  • Fort Cady project financing is still in discussion, not finalized

News Market Reaction – FEAM

-2.90%
-2.90% News Effect

On the day this news was published, FEAM declined 2.90%, reflecting a moderate negative market reaction.

Data tracked by StockTitan Argus on the day of publication.

Market Context

The new HOA adds a third commercial milestone in 60 days and secures 5,000–8,000 short tons annually...
Analysis

The new HOA adds a third commercial milestone in 60 days and secures 5,000–8,000 short tons annually, bolstering Fort Cady’s financing case; investors may watch for conversion into definitive contracts and further funding progress.

Key Figures

Third commercial offtake: 3 agreements in 60 days May 2026 HOA term: 10-year term May 2026 HOA volume: 7,500–10,000 short tons +5 more
8 metrics
Third commercial offtake 3 agreements in 60 days Fort Cady commercial milestones through July 7, 2026
May 2026 HOA term 10-year term HOA with domestic industrial manufacturer (5-year + 5-year renewal)
May 2026 HOA volume 7,500–10,000 short tons Annual offtake under May 13, 2026 HOA
July 1 IOI term 5-year term Non-binding indication of interest with domestic industrial end-user
July 1 IOI volume 3,750–4,500 short tons Annual offtake under July 1, 2026 IOI
Cellulose HOA term 10-year term HOA with domestic cellulose insulation company (5-year + 5-year renewal)
Cellulose HOA annual minimum 5,000 short tons Minimum annual offtake under July 7, 2026 HOA
Cellulose HOA annual maximum 8,000 short tons Maximum annual offtake under July 7, 2026 HOA

Historical Context

5 past events · Latest: Jul 01 (Positive)
Pattern 5 events
Date Event Sentiment 24h Move Catalyst
Jul 01 Boric acid offtake IOI Positive +3.6% Non-binding 5-year boric acid IOI supporting Fort Cady financing path.
Jun 09 Conference presentation Neutral +1.3% Planet MicroCap Las Vegas presentation and investor access to management.
Jun 04 Investor webinar recap Positive +13.7% Webinar highlighting positive lithium PEA and Fort Cady development progress.
Jun 01 Webinar announcement Neutral -3.2% Scheduled webinar to discuss lithium PEA and critical minerals strategy.
May 20 Lithium PEA results Positive +4.4% Preliminary economic assessment for lithium carbonate at Fort Cady with favorable metrics.

24h Move is the share-price change in the day after each event; other market factors may also have contributed.

Pattern Detected

Recent positive Fort Cady and lithium updates have generally been followed by supportive next-day price moves.

Key Terms

offtake heads of agreement, non-binding indication of interest, take-or-pay obligation, short tons
4 terms
offtake heads of agreement financial
"announced it has signed an offtake heads of agreement ("HOA") with a domestic"
A heads of agreement for an offtake is a short, non‑binding outline of the main terms under which a buyer agrees to purchase a portion or all of a producer’s future output (for example commodities, energy, or manufactured goods). It matters to investors because it signals likely future sales and can help secure project funding or support a company’s valuation—think of it as a handshake that maps out a future purchase deal before the formal contract is signed.
non-binding indication of interest financial
"following an offtake HOA signed in May 2026 with a domestic industrial manufacturer and a non-binding indication of interest signed"
A non-binding indication of interest is a preliminary, informal statement from a potential buyer or investor saying they would consider making an offer, subject to further review and final contracts. It matters to investors because it signals real market interest and can move prices or shape expectations about a possible deal, while not guaranteeing that any transaction will actually happen.
take-or-pay obligation financial
"includes a take-or-pay obligation on the minimum contracted volume."
A take-or-pay obligation is a contract clause that requires a buyer to either take a specified minimum amount of goods or services from a seller or else pay for the agreed amount even if they do not take delivery. It matters to investors because it creates predictable revenue and cash flow for the seller while imposing fixed payment risk on the buyer, similar to a subscription or minimum-usage fee that affects future earnings and balance-sheet exposure.
short tons technical
"an annual minimum offtake of 5,000 short tons and a maximum of 8,000 short tons"
A short ton is a unit of weight used mainly in the United States equal to 2,000 pounds (about 907 kilograms). Investors see it in commodity, mining, shipping and manufacturing reports because production, inventory and sales are often quoted in short tons—think of it like counting goods in “carloads” where each short ton is roughly the weight of a small car. Converting to other weight units helps compare across global reports.

AI-generated analysis. How Rhea-AI works. Not financial advice.

See more from StockTitan in Google Search and AI answers. Adds StockTitan as a preferred source · opens Google
Add on Google

Latest Agreement with U.S. Cellulose Insulation Company Further Builds on Commercial Momentum and Supports Fort Cady's Path to Bankability

HESPERIA, CA / ACCESS Newswire / July 7, 2026 / 5E Advanced Materials, Inc. ("5E" or the "Company") (NASDAQ:FEAM), a company focused on becoming a vertically integrated global leader and supplier of refined borates and advanced boron derivative materials, today announced it has signed an offtake heads of agreement ("HOA") with a domestic cellulose insulation company for the purchase of boric acid and calcium sulphate products from the Company's Fort Cady Integrated Boron Facility in Southern California. Boric acid is a required fire-retardant additive in virtually all cellulose insulation, and the agreement signals a domestic manufacturer is moving to lock in a U.S.-based supply source ahead of Fort Cady's full-scale production.

This is the third commercial offtake milestone 5E Advanced Materials has announced in approximately 60 days, following an offtake HOA signed in May 2026 with a domestic industrial manufacturer and a non-binding indication of interest signed with a second domestic industrial end-user. Combined, the agreements and indications of interest signed to date span multiple market segments and end-use markets, supporting Fort Cady's project financing discussions.

"Announcing our third commercial milestone in as many months reflects the momentum we are building as we execute our commercialization strategy for Fort Cady," said Paul Weibel, Chief Executive Officer. "The continued signing of offtake agreements and indications of interest across multiple domestic end markets, including established industrial users and emerging growth companies, demonstrates both the quality of our boric acid product and the urgent demand for a reliable domestic supply chain. Boric acid is a critical input for maintaining fire efficacy in cellulose insulation, and this HOA further strengthens Fort Cady's commercial readiness and the role we can play in enabling new domestic manufacturing capacity."

Commercial pipeline to date:

Date

Counterparty Type

Term

Annual Volume

May 13, 2026

Domestic industrial

HOA 5-year + 5-year renewal (10-year term)

7,500 - 10,000 short tons

July 1, 2026

Domestic industrial

Non-binding IOI

(5-year term)

3,750 - 4,500 short tons

July 7, 2026

Domestic cellulose

HOA 5-year + 5-year renewal (10-year term)

5,000 - 8,000 short tons

Recent Business Highlights include:

  • Signed heads of agreement with a domestic cellulose insulation company - The HOA contemplates a 5-year initial term with a 5-year automatic renewal, an annual minimum offtake of 5,000 short tons and a maximum of 8,000 short tons, at a fixed price subject to annual escalation. The arrangement is subject to the negotiation and execution of a definitive product purchase agreement and includes a take-or-pay obligation on the minimum contracted volume.

  • Third commercial agreement in approximately 60 days - This HOA follows 5E's first offtake HOA signed in May 2026 with a domestic industrial manufacturer and a non-binding indication of interest signed with a second domestic industrial end-user, collectively demonstrating broad and growing demand across the cellulose insulation and industrial end-use markets.

  • Expanding domestic customer base across multiple end markets - 5E's commercial pipeline continues to grow across diverse end-use applications for boric acid. Management believes this diversification across customers and end markets strengthens the overall commercial case supporting Fort Cady's project financing needs.

About 5E Advanced Materials, Inc.

5E Advanced Materials, Inc. (NASDAQ:FEAM) is a development-stage company focused on becoming a vertically integrated global leader and supplier of refined borates and advanced boron materials, complemented by calcium-based co-products, and potentially other by-products such as lithium carbonate. The Company's mission is to become a supplier of these critical materials to industries addressing global decarbonization, energy independence, food, national security, and the defense sector. The Company believes factors such as government regulation and incentives focused on domestic manufacturing and supply chains and capital investments across industries will drive demand for end-use applications like solar and wind energy infrastructure, neodymium-iron-boron magnets, defense applications, lithium-ion batteries, and other critical material applications. The business is based on the Company's large domestic boron resource, which is located in Southern California and designated as Critical Infrastructure by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, and boron was added to the U.S. Department of the Interior's 2025 Critical Minerals List.

Forward Looking Statements

Statements in this press release may contain "forward-looking statements" that are subject to substantial risks and uncertainties.Forward-looking statements contained in this press release may be identified by the use of words such as "may," "will," "should," "expect," "plan," "anticipate," "could," "intend," "target," "project," "contemplate," "believe," "estimate," "predict," "potential" or "continue" or the negative of these terms or other similar expressions, and include, but are not limited to statements regarding the Company's non-binding indications of interest and offtake heads of agreement; the potential negotiation and execution of definitive, binding offtake and purchase agreements; contemplated volumes, term, pricing and escalation terms, including anticipated take-or-pay and minimum-offtake commitments and the realization of such commitments under definitive agreements; customer evaluation of product quality, specifications and production capability; the timing of, and the Company's ability to achieve, commercial readiness and full-scale production at the Fort Cady Project; the Company's customer outreach and engagement efforts and its growing pipeline of commercial opportunities; the potential for customer commercial arrangements to support the Fort Cady Project's path toward bankability and a Final Investment Decision; expected demand for a reliable, U.S.-based supplier of boric acid and specialty boron derivative products amid ongoing supply chain constraints, and the potential for such demand and the Company's products to enable new domestic manufacturing capacity; the Company's ability to advance the Fort Cady Project toward future financing and construction readiness; the Company's strategy to become a vertically integrated supplier of refined borates and advanced boron materials, calcium-based co-products and potential by-products such as lithium carbonate; and anticipated demand for boron and boron derivative products in end markets and applications including decarbonization, energy independence, food, national security and defense, solar and wind energy infrastructure, neodymium-iron-boron magnets and lithium-ion batteries. Any forward-looking statements are based on 5E's current expectations, forecasts, and assumptions and are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties that could cause actual outcomes and results to differ materially. For a discussion of other risks and uncertainties, and other important factors, any of which could cause our actual results to differ from those contained in the forward-looking statements, see the section entitled "Risk Factors" in 5E's most recent Annual Report on Form 10-K and its other reports filed with the SEC. Forward-looking statements contained in this announcement are based on information available to 5E as of the date hereof and are made only as of the date of this release. 5E undertakes no obligation to update such information except as required under applicable law. These forward-looking statements should not be relied upon as representing 5E's views as of any date subsequent to the date of this press release. In light of the foregoing, investors are urged not to rely on any forward-looking statement in reaching any conclusion or making any investment decision about any securities of 5E.

For further information contact:

Investor Relations
Brett Maas
Hayden IR, LLC
FEAM@haydenir.com
Ph: +1 (480) 861-2425

Media Relations
Paola Ashton
PRA Communications
team@pracommunications.com
Ph: +1 (604) 681-1407

SOURCE: 5E Advanced Materials, Inc.



View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire

FAQ

What did 5E Advanced Materials (NASDAQ:FEAM) announce on July 7, 2026 about Fort Cady?

5E Advanced Materials announced a new offtake heads of agreement with a U.S. cellulose insulation company. According to 5E Advanced Materials, it covers boric acid and calcium sulphate from the Fort Cady Integrated Boron Facility in Southern California, supporting project financing discussions.

What are the key terms of 5E Advanced Materials’ July 7, 2026 offtake HOA for FEAM?

The HOA includes a 5-year initial term with an automatic 5-year renewal. According to 5E Advanced Materials, it specifies 5,000–8,000 short tons annually at a fixed price with escalation, plus a take-or-pay obligation on the minimum contracted volume.

How does the new FEAM offtake HOA impact Fort Cady’s commercial pipeline?

The new HOA becomes the third commercial milestone for Fort Cady within about 60 days. According to 5E Advanced Materials, the pipeline now spans domestic industrial and cellulose insulation customers with multi-year terms and defined annual boric acid volumes.

Is the July 7, 2026 FEAM offtake agreement with the cellulose insulation company binding?

The offtake is currently a heads of agreement and not yet a definitive contract. According to 5E Advanced Materials, the arrangement remains subject to negotiation and execution of a definitive product purchase agreement before it becomes fully binding.

What annual volumes are covered across 5E Advanced Materials’ Fort Cady commercial agreements?

The May 13, 2026 HOA covers 7,500–10,000 short tons annually, and the July 7, 2026 HOA covers 5,000–8,000 short tons. According to 5E Advanced Materials, a July 1, 2026 non-binding indication of interest contemplates 3,750–4,500 short tons per year.

Why is boric acid from Fort Cady important for U.S. cellulose insulation manufacturers?

Boric acid is described as a required fire-retardant additive in virtually all cellulose insulation. According to 5E Advanced Materials, the HOA shows a domestic manufacturer moving to secure reliable U.S.-based boric acid supply ahead of Fort Cady’s full-scale production.