
Nova Minerals completed its redomiciliation from Australia to the US, with shares expected on NYSE American under NVA on June 17. The move targets institutional capital for its Estelle gold project and antimony supply chain.
Nova Minerals Corp completed its move from Australia to the United States on Monday. The company's common stock and warrants are expected to start trading on the NYSE American under symbols NVA and NVAWS on or about June 17.
The redomiciliation brings Nova under SEC reporting requirements and NYSE American corporate governance rules. For a developer of a large gold project in Alaska, a US exchange listing opens a wider pool of institutional capital than the Australian board provided. A Form 8-K filed with the SEC contains the details.
Nova's core asset is the Estelle Gold and Critical Minerals Project in the Tintina Gold Belt, the same province that hosts Kinross Gold's Fort Knox mine. Estelle holds two defined multi-million-ounce gold resources and more than 20 prospects along a 35-kilometre mineralised trend. In parallel, a US$43.4 million award from the U.S. Department of Defense funds development of a domestic antimony supply chain, targeted for late 2026 or 2027.
The gold and antimony strategy is the main story for Nova. Both legs depend on execution. The Estelle project is not yet in production. The antimony facility timeline faces permitting and construction risks. Nova's press release includes standard forward-looking caution on timing, funding, and regulatory approvals.
Kinross Gold (KGC, Alpha Score 79, Strong) operates the neighbour mine in the Tintina Belt, giving a real-world benchmark for Nova's resource potential. Nova's proximity to existing infrastructure and its antimony angle–critical for defense–differentiate it from other early-stage gold developers. The NYSE listing is a milestone. Production delivery will determine whether the stock attracts sustained institutional interest.
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