The Church property in northern Ontario is shaping up as the next inflection point for Highland Critical Minerals. The junior explorer is preparing to kick off a summer programme at the end of May, using fresh capital raised through a flow-through private placement to fund radiometric surveys, LiDAR measurements and soil sampling aimed at delineating lithium-rich zones. The work comes at a turbulent time: regulators have demanded explanations for erratic trading, and the stock lost nearly half its value in a single session.
In early April, the company closed a non-brokered flow-through private placement for gross proceeds of C$400,000. It issued 1.6 million flow-through common shares at C$0.25 each. The proceeds are earmarked for critical-mineral exploration, with the Church property in Ontario and the Sy property in Nunavut as the primary recipients.
At Church, the focus is on lithium potential. The planned radiometric and LiDAR surveys, combined with geochemical soil sampling, are designed to better outline zones of elevated lithium mineralisation. Preparations for the Sy project in Nunavut are also moving forward.
The exploration campaign is unfolding against a backdrop of extreme share-price volatility. On 13 May, the stock crashed nearly 47% in North America to US$0.31, before staging a modest recovery in European trading. Year to date, the equity has shed about half its value. Two days earlier, on 8 May, the Canadian Investment Regulatory Organisation (CIRO) had requested a management statement on the unusual market activity. Chief executive Edward “Ted” Yew told regulators the company was unaware of any material operational change that could explain the swings.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Highland Critical Minerals?
Highland remains a classic early-stage explorer with no operating revenue. In its fiscal 2025, the company reported a net loss of roughly C$559,000. Market capitalisation has swung between about C$5.06 million and C$6 million, underscoring the speculative nature of the stock.
Despite the turbulence, some sector analysts view Highland as a potential acquisition target. The thesis rests on high-grade drill results from 2025 that returned gold and antimony mineralisation. Producers are scouring North America for strategic-metal projects to diversify supply, and Highland’s early-stage discoveries put it on their radar. But the company has yet to publish a compliant resource estimate. The next major milestone is a NI 43-101 resource statement, which management has targeted by the end of 2026.
In December 2025, Highland spun out its Red Lake Gold assets, distributing 15.6 million shares of the new subsidiary to Highland shareholders. The move sharpened the parent company’s focus on critical minerals while retaining an indirect gold exposure.
For now, near-term attention is fixed on the Church programme. If the geophysical and geochemical surveys yield compelling targets, the stock could trade on more than just takeover fantasy. Without hard data, however, the narrative remains as volatile as the share price itself.
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