Welcome to our dedicated page for Critical Metals SEC filings (Ticker: CRML), a comprehensive resource for investors and traders seeking official regulatory documents including 10-K annual reports, 10-Q quarterly earnings, 8-K material events, and insider trading forms.
Critical Metals Corp. filings document the company’s foreign private issuer reports, mineral project ownership, capital structure, governance, and material agreements. Recent Form 6-K reports cover the completed increase of the company’s Tanbreez Mining Greenland A/S ownership to 92.5%, related ordinary share issuances, resale registration obligations, and incorporation of disclosed matters into Form F-3, Form F-1, and Form S-8 registration statements.
The filing record also includes disclosures on annual general meeting materials, shareholder voting matters, warrants, private placements, rare earth project arrangements, risk factors, and operating and financial results. These documents frame CRML’s public-company record around development-stage mining assets, ordinary share capital, and governance matters.
Critical Metals (NASDAQ:CRML) filed a Form 6-K disclosing receipt of a non-binding letter of interest (LOI) from the Export-Import Bank of the United States (EXIM) dated 16 June 2025. EXIM may provide up to $120 million in project financing to advance the Tanbreez Green Rare Earth Mine, where Critical Metals currently owns 42%.
The company intends to invest $10 million in exploration at Tanbreez by year-end 2025. Completion of this spend would trigger an option to acquire an additional 50.5% stake, raising aggregate ownership to 92.5%. The option would be settled through issuance of new ordinary shares to the current majority owner valued at $116 million, implying potential dilution.
The LOI is expressly non-binding and closing remains subject to due diligence, definitive documentation and other customary conditions, so there is no assurance the financing or ownership increase will occur. The filing incorporates this information into the company’s existing S-8, F-3 and F-1 registration statements.
Key takeaways: potential access to substantial U.S. government–backed capital, a clear path to near-full control of a strategic rare-earth asset, and shareholder dilution and execution risk if the transactions proceed.