Highlights
- Treasury Secretary Bessent targets Thanksgiving to finalize a rare earths supply deal suspending China's export restrictions for one year in exchange for U.S. tariff rollbacks.
- The temporary suspension offers geopolitical breathing room but doesn't address China's 85-90% control of rare earth processing and magnet production capacity.
- Officials dispute reports of military-tied restrictions, yet the deal's fragility and strategic blind spots reveal this is a timeout, not a genuine détente.
So what’s going on with the finalization of the Sino-American trade deal. Yes a framework was agreed upon in Malaysia and now….a holiday breakthrough—or the Illusion of one?
Table of Contents
The Straits Times report (opens in a new tab) adds new texture to the unfolding story
U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent insists Washington hopes to finalize a rare earths supply deal with China by Thanksgiving. Under the tentative October Trump–Xi framework, China would suspend key export restrictions for one year; the U.S. would roll back certain tariffs; soybeans would flow again. On the surface, it’s a neat transactional détente.
But the rare earth sector is never neat. And this version comes with a diplomatic twist: Bessent publicly disputed a Wall Street Journal report claiming Beijing planned to restrict rare earths access for U.S. firms with military ties. When officials start contradicting major newspapers on live TV, you know the underlying terrain is shifting.
The Facts Are Solid—But the Context Is Slippery
Several points remain uncontroversially accurate:
First, China imposed new export licensing requirements on April 4. Yes, Beijing controls ~85–90% of global REE separation and nearly all NdFeB magnet output. And finally, U.S.-China tariffs and counter-tariffs throttled soybean volumes.
But the “rare earths will flow freely as they did before April 4” claim—repeated by Bessent—ignores the historical baseline: even pre-April, China exercised informal restraints through price compression, administrative friction, and strategic quota timing. “Free flow” is a political phrase, not a market reality.
A One-Year Suspension Is Not Stability—It’s Leverage
As Rare Earth Exchanges has chronicled, a temporary pause on restrictions does nothing to change China’s structural dominance in the midstream and downstream. And licensing rules can return instantly. Investors should treat a one-year suspension as geopolitical breathing room, not a reset of the supply chain.
Bessent’s warning that the U.S. has “lots of levers” if China balks may reassure viewers—but it also signals how fragile the deal truly is.
Missing in the Headlines: The Strategic Blind Spot
Neither the pieces over the weekend in the Times of India (opens in a new tab) nor the Straits Times grapples with the core issue: magnet capacity. Even if concentrates and oxides move again, the United States still lacks industrial-scale NdFeB magnet production. A tariff rollback doesn’t change China’s Five-Year Plans to expand magnet dominance. And temporary diplomatic sunshine risks dulling U.S. urgency to build midstream infrastructure.
Markets Don’t Trade on Soundbites—They Trade on Structural Risk
A suspension may soften NdPr sentiment, but Dy/Tb markets will remain alert to any sign that Beijing could tighten control after the 12-month window. None of the mainstream reporting acknowledges this strategic tension.
This isn’t a détente. It’s a timeout—with both sides armed.
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