Highlights
- China's new export controls on rare earth minerals dropped exports 31% in September, targeting defense, semiconductors, and high-performance materials where the U.S. has its own restrictions.
- ABC News' coverage misrepresents the scale of China's control—Beijing dominates midstream processing but doesn't control global demand or all downstream production.
- The real strategic impact lies in China's grip on separation and magnet manufacturing, forcing the U.S., EU, and Japan to accelerate efforts to rebuild domestic processing capacity.
It’s rare that a single headline captures both the anxiety and the misunderstanding of a geopolitical moment. ABC News’ recent “US–China Rare Earth Minerals Fight Explained” is a perfect case study — urgent, dramatic, and only half right. To the casual reader, it paints China as the puppet master of the global economy and the United States as a reluctant defender of free markets. But to anyone steeped in the granular reality of the rare earth supply chain, the truth is subtler — and far more consequential.
The Facts Beneath the Fury
China has tightened its export control regime — and in significant ways. The new measures extend to rare earth elements, magnet technologies, and even downstream products containing Chinese-origin materials. These rules are real, phased, and already reshaping market behavior. Export data bear this out: Chinese rare earth exports dropped roughly 31% in September, the steepest decline in years.
Moreover, Beijing’s focus on dual-use sectors — defense, semiconductors, and high-performance materials — is not new but newly explicit. These aren’t random trade levers; they target the exact technologies that Washington itself has restricted from flowing to China. In this sense, Beijing is mirroring U.S. strategy, not inventing it.
Hyperbole at Work
Where the ABC piece falters is in scale and tone. The claim that China’s rules could give it “control over basically the entire global economy” belongs in campaign rhetoric, not serious reporting. Yes, China dominates the midstream — separation, refining, and magnet manufacturing — but it doesn’t control global demand or downstream production. Likewise, the notion that every car or chip would now need Chinese export approval misreads the mechanism: the rules target specific origin materials, not every product containing a trace mineral atom.
Timing motives — that Beijing is maneuvering to force rollback of U.S. export bans — remain speculative. It’s plausible, but attribution without evidence veers into narrative overreach. And Trump’s floated “100% tariffs” on all Chinese goods are presented as fait accompli when they remain political theater until signed into law.
Framing the Dragon
What’s most revealing is the article’s narrative architecture. The U.S. officials lead the story; Chinese voices trail in rebuttal. Language like “coercion,” “grip,” and “control” primes readers emotionally, while U.S. measures are cast as reluctant self-defense. This imbalance doesn’t just shape perception — it distorts understanding of the chessboard.
What’s Really at Stake
China’s move isn’t a tantrum; it’s a strategy. By targeting midstream bottlenecks — the alchemy that turns mined ore into magnets — Beijing is flexing where it matters most. For decades, the world treated that industrial layer as invisible. Now, every Western policymaker and investor must reckon with it.
If fully implemented, these controls will accelerate U.S., EU, and Japanese efforts to reclaim their magnet and separation capacity, reprice geopolitical risk, and finally value resilience over convenience. The real question isn’t whether China can choke the supply chain — it’s whether the rest of the world can learn to breathe without it. And as Rare Earth Exchanges has emphasized, critical mineral and rare earth industrial policy will become the difference maker.
©!-- /wp:paragraph -->
As RE retail investors, we have suggested that the importance of a …”rare earth industrial policy will become the difference maker” is IOHO, overstated.
The former Trump, previous Biden and now present Trump Admin have shown very little structured RE sector policy guiding their strategic awards. These Admins have supported various ROW RE wannabees, almost piecemeal, and this has helped already returned some amazing RE sp rewards since 2022.
We have no reason to believe yet that such a trend will not be maintained at least during the Trump Presidency. Oh yes, there will no doubt be some RE wannabee failures and the vast majority in the ROW will continue to flounder (strong project economics or not).
The US gov’ has no problems (like gold majors) in handing out mills to a variety of mining wannabees (i.e, ‘small’ $ support and LOIs) knowing most will not be more fully supported later on. Such losses are part of the ‘business’.
Yes, a more coherent Admin policy may lead in the longer term to more resilient ROW RE value chains but for us this decade is long term. Tired of prognosticators going to to later 2030s/40s/50s. We can’t even predict wha tthe next 12 months will lokk like never mind the impact of recyling and RE/non RE related innovations which are coming.
We enjoy all REEx writings, etc., but we will not be basing our investment decisions on whether the US, etc., have/are developing coherent metals policies. We believe by the time these may arrive RE sector investment opportunities will have been pretty much decided and the explosive money made.
Again, our very HO. GLTA – REI