Aminex PLC has been gaining attention that a company trading at 2.6 pence a share typically doesn’t receive on the quieter floors of the London Stock Exchange, where small-cap energy names trade in modest volumes and the investor base runs to private shareholders checking screens over morning coffee. The stock was trading at slightly more than a penny a year ago. It has doubled and then more today, trading at 2.60p.
This 52-week increase of more than 116% is either the market pricing in a real gas development milestone or the most recent instance of speculative small-cap momentum outpacing the fundamentals. The real answer is most likely in the middle of those two readings, and the outcome will be heavily influenced by events in Tanzania throughout the coming months.
The Ntorya gas potential in Tanzania’s Ruvuma PSA, in which Aminex owns a 63.83% operational stake through its subsidiary Ndovu Resources, is the main focus of Aminex’s investment case. Because of this asset, the company was able to raise £2.9 million in October 2025 to continue operations until it generated its first gas revenue. This was a piece of corporate communication that was both reassuring and explanatory. reassuring since the business has a short-term stimulus and a clear roadmap.
It’s important to clarify because the fundraising verified that Aminex was working on a schedule where the immediate constraint—rather than exploratory ambiguity—was cash until the end of 2025 and into 2026. September 2026 has been set as the first gas revenue from Ntorya, and the market is using that date as a benchmark for everything else.
For a stock that has already risen as much as AEX has in a year, the analyst consensus price objective of 3.00p is just 13% above recent trading levels, indicating a more moderate remaining upside than the trajectory might suggest. It’s important to take note of Stockopedia’s designation of the stock as a Momentum Trap without going overboard.
This indicates a pattern in which price momentum has surpassed underlying fundamental improvement, which in an exploration-stage energy company is often the setup prior to a production catalyst rather than a permanent condition. The concern is whether the catalyst will arrive on schedule and whether the initial gas revenue will be sufficient to support the present market valuation, which is pricing in a significant level of commercial success at about £111 million.
In 2025 and 2026, Aminex’s small-cap energy sector was both volatile and selectively profitable. Investors were eager to take on Tanzania exploration risk at the appropriate price, but they were also quick to reprice lower if catalysts faltered. The September 2026 first gas date bears the weight of having already been foreseen and postponed in earlier incarnations of the company’s plans, since any investor in the stock will be aware of the Ntorya timeline’s revisions.
Observing the price movement, it appears that the market is giving Aminex more leeway than it did eighteen months ago. This is due in part to the fact that the October 2025 fundraising eliminated the near-term solvency issue and in part to the fact that Tanzania’s gas development has transitioned from a geological prospect to a development-stage asset with a defined production timeline.

Whether September 2026 holds, whether first gas revenue materializes at the volume implied by the current share price, and whether the stock reaches a new level once the production milestone is either confirmed or postponed are all still up in the air.
As of right now, AEX is one of the most keenly followed small-cap energy names on London’s main market. This isn’t because the firm is big; rather, it’s because the price difference between where it is and where it has to be for the development thesis to work is closing.
