Rare Earth Reality Check: Beyond CNBC’s U.S.-China Magnet Showdown

Aug 10, 2025

Highlights

  • China controls approximately 70% of rare earth mining and approximately 90% of processing capacity, creating a critical global supply chain vulnerability.
  • U.S. Department of Defense has invested $400 million in MP Materials to develop domestic rare earth magnet production capacity.
  • Achieving U.S. rare earth self-sufficiency by 2030 requires comprehensive industrial policy, workforce training, and international partnerships.

The CNBC recent โ€œRare Earths Are Chinaโ€™s Trump Card In The Trade War โ€” How The U.S. Is Trying To Fix That (opens in a new tab)โ€ segment accurately frames the central truth of the current situation: China controls ~70% of rare earth mining and ~90% of processing capacity. The description of light vs. heavy rare earth extraction methods โ€” hard rock blasting vs. ion-adsorption clays โ€” aligns with established environmental and technical realities. U.S. dependency on China for both raw and processed rare earths, particularly neodymium-praseodymium (NdPr) magnets, is not in dispute, nor is the fact that MP Materials runs the only operational U.S. mine at Mountain Pass.

The Department of Defenseโ€™s $400M investment in MP Materials, coupled with price floor guarantees (~$110/kg NdPr), is a verifiable and consequential move aimed at creating domestic magnet-making capacity. Energy Fuelsโ€™ use of monazite from Chemoursโ€™ Georgia sands and its handling of radioactivity at the White Mesa mill are also grounded in operational fact.

Where the Narrative Gets Fuzzy

The video leans into โ€œexistential competitionโ€ and โ€œall hands on deck warfareโ€ rhetoric โ€” language that may overheat an otherwise sober supply chain discussion. While the claim that Chinaโ€™s April 2025 export controls shut down production at Suzuki and Ford is accurateโ€”at least the Ford news we were able to verifyโ€”but the CNBC piece is presented without sourcing, making it hard to verify. Similarly, the suggestion that China assumed Teslaโ€™s humanoid robot magnets would be for military use veers into speculation without documented evidence.

The assertion that U.S. mines could meet โ€œ50โ€“100%โ€ of domestic needs in 3โ€“4 years feels optimistic given known permitting timelines, chemical reagent dependencies, and skilled labor shortages โ€” all points the piece itself admits remain hurdles.ย  Rare Earth Exchangesย suggests perhaps in five years (2030-2031), and with near flawless execution, maybe 50% could be reachable (here we assume with international partnerships).

The segment frames China as both a geopolitical adversary and a manipulator of global pricing, but offers a limited perspective on how U.S. or allied environmental, cost, or policy factors have contributed to current vulnerabilities.ย  After all, the USA used to be at the apex of magnet production once upon a time. ย Plus, the absence of discussion on allied capacity-building (e.g., Lynas in Australia) narrows the scope to a U.S.-China binary.

Investor Takeaway

There is genuine momentum in U.S. rare earth capacity-building โ€” MPโ€™s magnet expansion, Energy Fuelsโ€™ diversification, recycling initiatives โ€” but domestic self-sufficiency in magnets by 2030 is unlikely without parallel investment in reagents, metallurgical workforce training, and allied partnerships.ย  Essentially, a far more potent, integrated, and comprehensive industrial policy.ย  Much like President Trump did for Operation Warp Speed in response to the pandemic.ย 

The CNBC piece delivers valuable on-the-ground visuals and key data points. Still, investors should separate hard metrics from overly optimistic aspirations, and for that matter, geopolitical theater, and verify disruption claims before baking them into risk models.

Source: CNBC, โ€œInside Americaโ€™s Race to Break Chinaโ€™s Rare Earth Monopoly,โ€ (opens in a new tab) Aug. 2025.

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By Daniel

Inspired to launch Rare Earth Exchanges in part due to his lifelong passion for geology and mineralogy, and patriotism, to ensure America and free market economies develop their own rare earth and critical mineral supply chains.

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