Flight Centre Travel Group Ltd (ASX: FLT), Goodman Group (ASX: GMG) and Mineral Resources Ltd (ASX: MIN) shares are turning heads today.
But not for their outperformance.
During the Tuesday lunch hour, only one of the three big-name ASX stocks is edging above the 0.5% losses posted by the S&P/ASX 200 Index (ASX: XJO), with the other two taking a steeper tumble.
Here's what's grabbing investor interest.

Image source: Getty Images
Mineral Resources shares growing their lithium footprint
In earlier trade, shares in the ASX 200 lithium miner and diversified resources producer were up as much as 2% at $72.94 apiece, marking a two-year high.
But, potentially impacted by intraday concerns over renewed conflict in the Middle East, Mineral Resources shares are down 0.2% at the time of writing, trading for $71.39 apiece.
The mining giant is creating a buzz today after announcing that, together with JV partner Jiangxi Ganfeng Lithium, it has made the final investment decision (FID) to build a flotation plant at its Mt Marion lithium project, located in Western Australia. The FID also greenlights the development of underground mining at the project.
The JV partners will spend around $490 million on the combined works across FY 2027 and FY 2028.
Commenting on the decision that's intended to support Mineral Resource shares over the longer term, managing director Chris Ellison said:
This high-return brownfield investment sets up Mt Marion for decades to come. Underground mining and flotation will work together to access deeper high-grade ore, lift recoveries and produce a single 5% product.
Flight Centre shares sink on Middle East travel impacts
Flight Centre shares are down 3.6% at the time of writing, changing hands for $9.91 each.
This follows a trading update from the ASX 200 travel stock, delivered during its annual Investor Day.
Investors look to favouring their sell buttons after Flight Centre noted that after a strong first three quarters of FY 2026, its fourth quarter performance has been "heavily impacted by Middle East tensions".
Flight Centre expects to record a $10 million reduction in its expected April profits amid rising refunds and other headwinds from the ongoing Iran war.
The company's leisure business has been hardest hit, with Flight Centre warning that May and June may take an even steeper hit on the company's bottom line, noting that May and June are typically stronger leisure trading months.
Which brings us to…
Goodman shares repositioning for AI data centre growth
Joining Flight Centre and Mineral Resources shares in the headlines today, Goodman shares are down 2.5%, trading for $29.30 apiece.
This follows the release of the ASX 200 integrated property group's third-quarter update.
Goodman shares are slipping despite the company reporting a stable total portfolio value of $87.1 billion. And on the growth front, as at 31 March, Goodman has $14.5 billion of work in progress across its development projects.
Over the past four quarters, Goodman has leased 3.3 million square metres, bringing in $491 million in annual rental income.
Commenting on the company's shifting focus, most notably impacted by the surging demand for AI-enabled data centres, Goodman Group CEO Greg Goodman said:
The group has progressively repositioned its portfolio toward large, infrastructure-scale industrial assets and data centres…
Hyperscale capex is accelerating, with our metropolitan portfolio positioned at the centre of cloud and AI demand, and the shift towards low-latency dependant AI inferencing.