Rare Earth Crossfire: Why Korea’s Chipmakers Are the Latest Casualty of the U.S.-China Trade Storm

Oct 14, 2025

Highlights

  • China imposes new export controls on rare earth materials, targeting strategic and security-sensitive technologies.
  • US proposes 100% tariffs on Chinese imports, creating potential supply chain disruptions for tech industries.
  • Rare earth elements emerge as geopolitical instruments in the ongoing technological and economic competition between the US and China.

The Korea Herald’s report (opens in a new tab), “U.S.–China Trade Clash Rattles Korean Chipmakers Amid Rare Earth Curbs,” paints a tense tableau of escalating trade brinkmanship: Beijing’s new export restrictions on rare earths and Washington’s retaliatory tariffs, all unfolding on the eve of the APEC summit in Korea (opens in a new tab). While the reporting captures genuine market anxiety, some of the narrative blurs what’s verifiable fact, what’s speculative diplomacy, and what’s a reflection of media mood.

The Facts That Stick

Yes—China has indeed tightened rare earth export controls. Beijing’s October 2025 regulations extend licensing to materials containing more than 0.1% Chinese-sourced rare-earth content, including alloys such as samarium–cobalt and terbium–iron, as well as seven elemental REEs. These are real and confirm China’s broader strategy to harden control over downstream materials, particularly those used to make advanced semiconductors, defense optics, and EVs. Likewise, the U.S. tariff escalation—a proposed 100% blanket tariff on Chinese imports from November 1—has been corroborated by multiple official statements. These developments are credible and consequential.

The Gray Zone: Where Fear Sells Faster Than Fact

The claim that the restrictions specifically “target materials used in equipment for advanced chips” is plausible but interpretive—China’s language focuses on “strategic and security-sensitive” uses, not named industries. Also speculative: predictions of catastrophic supply-chain breakdowns in Korea. While Samsung (opens in a new tab) and SK hynix depend heavily on Chinese inputs (roughly 80% of rare earth metals and 47% of compounds), these companies maintain buffer inventories and diversified sourcing through Japan and Europe. Rare Earth Exchanges (REEx) intelligence suggests that the “collapse narrative” serves more as policy pressure than imminent crisis. But make no mistake, pressure is necessary.

Between Trade and Theater

Still, the strategic choreography is unmistakable. Beijing’s timing—tightening exports before the Trump–Xi meeting in Korea—is a geopolitical shot across the bow, much to the displeasure of President Trump.  It signals that China’s midstream dominance in REEs has become a deliberate trade weapon, linking mineral policy to chip diplomacy. Of course, this remains a theme REEx emphasized since our launch in October 2024.

Meanwhile, Washington’s “100% tariff” rhetoric plays to domestic politics but risks collateral damage to allied economies like South Korea’s.

For the rare earth supply chain, the signal is clear: rare earths are no longer just inputs—they’re instruments. The West, led by the U.S., must view this not as a temporary skirmish but as a sustained contest over control of technological gravity. As REEx has argued since the platform’s launch late last year, now is the moment to launch a bold, comprehensive industrial policy for critical minerals and rare earth elements—one that moves beyond rhetoric and reactionary moves, to coordinated, large-scale action.

Source: The Korea Herald (Jo He-rim), Oct. 14, 2025. Independent verification advised; policy interpretations subject to ongoing developments.

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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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