Highlights
- Australian billionaire Gina Rinehart has accumulated an 8.4% stake in MP Materials worth $997M.
- This makes her the largest shareholder in America's only rare-earth mine as Washington builds a non-Chinese magnet supply chain.
- The investment represents a strategic U.S.-Australia critical-minerals corridor aligned with Pentagon industrial policy and MP's $400M defense equity injection.
- Rinehart's move pressures U.S. policymakers on equitable support for mine-to-magnet projects.
- Questions arise whether other projects will receive comparable federal backing or face an unevenly subsidized market.
A billionaire steps onto America’s critical minerals chessboard. Australia’s richest citizen, Gina Rinehart, has quietly become the largest shareholder in MP Materials, accumulating an 8.4% stake after buying an additional 1 million shares in Q3, according to regulatory filings reported by Bloomberg. With MP’s stock doubling over the period, Hancock Prospecting’s position reached US$997 million—the crown jewel of its US$3 billion U.S. equities portfolio.
Table of Contents
This is not a casual flutter. Rinehart is extending her reach from Pilbara iron ore to the strategic heart of America’s rare earth supply chain—right as Washington attempts to build a non-Chinese magnet ecosystem before the 2030 demand cliff.
Coming to America….And Owning

What the Story Gets Right — And What Actually Matters
On the facts, the reporting is largely accurate. MP remains the only rare-earth mine in the United States, and its July US$400M Pentagon equity injection is a matter of public record. Rinehart’s net worth, Hancock’s holdings, and James Litinsky’s 7.9% ownership all align with known filings.
Where this matters is not in the celebrity factoids but in the geopolitical trajectory: Washington is deepening its relationship with a foreign mining billionaire whose empire is increasingly intertwined with U.S. defense supply chains. This is notable because Rinehart is already invested heavily in Australian critical-minerals build-outs—Niobium, vanadium, lithium—and now adds a U.S.-anchored rare-earth asset connected directly to Pentagon industrial policy.
Where the Narrative Wanders — A Gentle Debiasing
The piece frames Rinehart’s move as “boosting her bet on strategic minerals,” which is directionally correct but undersells the structural context. This is not merely a personal wager—it is part of a coordinated trend where private capital aligns with U.S. defense co-funding. The article also lightly implies that Hancock suddenly became MP’s savior, when in reality MP’s rise was driven by federal capital and a strong magnetization roadmap, not by shareholder reshuffling. Rare Earth Exchanges (REEx) also gives a lot of credit to Litinsky and the team’s operational prowess.
What’s Actually in Play: The Emerging U.S.–Australia Critical-Minerals Axis
This development reinforces a quiet but powerful trend: U.S. industrial policy increasingly intersects with Australian mining dominance. Rinehart attaching her name to MP strengthens the Canberra–Washington supply chain corridor and could accelerate future offtakes, magnet partnerships, or co-funded expansions.
It also pressures U.S. policymakers: if MP enjoys deep federal support, will other mine-to-magnet hopefuls receive equivalent backing or be left stranded in an unevenly subsidized market?
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