FIRTF (Mammoth Minerals) Total Receivables: $1.03 Mil (As of Dec. 2025)


What is Mammoth Minerals Total Receivables?

Mammoth Minerals FIRTF Total Receivables is $1.03 Mil as of Dec. 2025. The stock has 1 warning sign investors should review.

Mammoth Minerals's Total Receivables for the quarter that ended in Dec. 2025 was $1.03 Mil.


Mammoth Minerals Total Receivables Related Terms


Mammoth Minerals Total Receivables Historical Data

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The historical data trend for Mammoth Minerals's Total Receivables can be seen below:

* For Operating Data section: All numbers are indicated by the unit behind each term and all currency related amount are in USD.
* For other sections: All numbers are in millions except for per share data, ratio, and percentage. All currency related amount are indicated in the company's associated stock exchange currency.

Mammoth Minerals Total Receivables Chart

Mammoth Minerals Annual Data
Trend Jun22 Jun23 Jun24 Jun25
Total Receivables
0.12 0.02 0.02 0.61

Mammoth Minerals Semi-Annual Data
Jun22 Dec22 Jun23 Dec23 Jun24 Dec24 Jun25 Dec25
Total Receivables Get a 7-Day Free Trial 0.05 0.02 0.48 0.61 1.03

Mammoth Minerals Total Receivables Calculation

Total Receivables is the sum of all receivables owed by customers and affiliates within one year, including:
Accounts Receivable
Notes Receivable
Loans Receivable
Other Current Receivables

Frequently Asked Questions Learn more about Total Receivables →
What does a Total Receivables of $1.03 Mil mean?
Mammoth Minerals (FIRTF) has a Total Receivables of $1.03 Mil as of Dec. 2025. Total Receivables is the sum of all receivables owed by customers and affiliates within one year. View historical data on Mammoth Minerals and its competitors.
Is Mammoth Minerals' Total Receivables too high?
Mammoth Minerals' current Total Receivables is $1.03 Mil.
How does Mammoth Minerals' Total Receivables compare to HL?
Mammoth Minerals' Total Receivables of $1.03 Mil can be compared against companies in the Metals & Mining industry. See the competitive comparison table and distribution chart on this page for a detailed peer-by-peer breakdown.
What is a good Total Receivables for a Metals & Mining company?
A good Total Receivables depends on the Metals & Mining industry context. However, Total Receivables should not be evaluated in isolation — investors should consider it alongside profitability, growth, and financial strength metrics. Use the industry distribution chart on this page to see where any company falls relative to its peers.
What does a high Total Receivables mean?
A high Total Receivables can signal that a stock is expensive relative to its fundamentals. Total Receivables is the sum of all receivables owed by customers and affiliates within one year. View historical data on Mammoth Minerals and its competitors. Mammoth Minerals's current Total Receivables is $1.03 Mil. However, context matters — high-growth companies often justify higher valuations. Always evaluate alongside other metrics like GF Score™ and GF Value™.
Is Mammoth Minerals stock overvalued right now?
Mammoth Minerals (FIRTF) has a current Total Receivables of $1.03 Mil. The current Total Receivables is $1.03 Mil. Investors should evaluate multiple metrics — including profitability, growth, and financial strength — before making a decision.
How is Total Receivables calculated?
Total Receivables is calculated from a company's financial statements. For Mammoth Minerals (FIRTF), the current Total Receivables is $1.03 Mil as of Dec. 2025. GuruFocus calculates this using data sourced from SEC filings and annual reports. See the calculation section and 30-year financial data on this page for the full breakdown.

Mammoth Minerals Business Description

Other Exchanges 8WJ:GermanyM79:Australia
Address 85-87 Forrest Street, Suite 5, Level 1, Cottesloe, Perth, WA, AUS, 6011
Mammoth Minerals Ltd is an Australian-based exploration company. The group focuses on battery metal assets across Australia and Peru. Its projects include the Yalgoo-Dalgaranga Lithium Project in Western Australia, the Mt Slopeaway Nickel-Cobalt-Manganese Project in central Queensland, and the Picha and Charaque Copper Projects in Peru.