Highlights
- China's October data shows:
- Dysprosium exports plunged 80% to 3.5 tonnes due to licensing controls
- Terbium exports surged to 12.2 tonnes
- 6 tonnes of terbium were sent to the U.S.
- The supply constraint is policy-driven, not geologicalโBeijing's export-control regime creates bureaucratic discretion rather than true resource scarcity.
- Investors should:
- Focus on credible ex-China HREE projects
- Avoid panic buying spot metals marketed by traders with commercial scarcity incentives
Chinaโs October customs data (opens in a new tab), as relayed by a German metals trading house, show a dramatic divergence: dysprosium exports collapsing, terbium suddenly gushing โ including a record 6 tonnes of Tb shipped to the United States. Before interpreting this as either โall clearโ or โpanic now,โ Rare Earth Exchanges urges investors to distinguish what the data actually imply from what a physical-metal marketer might prefer they imply.
Table of Contents
3.5 Tonnes of Dysprosium: Scarcity or Stage-Managed Access?
The trader reports that only 3,501 kg of dysprosium left China in October โ an 80% month-over-month collapse, nearly all going to South Korea, Estonia, and Japan. This aligns neatly with Beijingโs April 4, 2025 export-control regime, which placed Dy, Tb, and associated magnets under case-by-case licensing.
A business development representative of the firm is correct that the โcircle of buyer countriesโ is narrow. Thatโs exactly how licensing regimes function: they donโt ban exports; they control access. But an 80% monthly swing is not evidence of geological scarcity โ itโs evidence of bureaucratic discretion.
Investor takeaway: Donโt confuse licensing volatility with resource depletionย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย
Terbium Floods to the U.S. โ A Favor, Not a Pivot
In contrast, terbium exports surged to 12.2 tonnes, with 6 tonnes to the U.S., the largest monthly U.S. intake in a decade โ even as Tb prices remain roughly 20% lower year-over-year.
This fits a familiar pattern:
China often restricts access, not volume. Official โbansโ on exports to the U.S. are followed by quiet exceptions, third-country transshipments, or temporary policy relaxations when geopolitics demand leverage.
Yes, 6 tonnes is notable. But it resembles a tactical concession far more than a strategic shift.
A one-month surge does not constitute a reliable supply.
Magnets in the Grey Zone
Of course, magnet exports are now entangled in the same regulatory thicket. Chinaโs 2025 rules require licensing for NdFeB magnets containing Dy/Tb, but customs codes donโt always specify composition. This creates delays, uncertainty, and inconsistent approvals.
For OEMs and investors, the deeper point is this:
The primary risk has migrated from the mine to the ministry.
The constraint isnโt oxide availability โ itโs whether your specific shipment wins regulatory clearance.
Correct Assessments and Incentivization
It is directionally correct that access to heavy rare earths is narrowing to a small group of favored jurisdictions. But traders are not academic institutes; they are commodity sellers and physical-asset promoters. That commercial positioning naturally nudges narratives toward scarcity marketing:
- Emphasizing alarming drops in Dy exports
- Highlighting anomalous Tb flows to the U.S.
- Downplaying re-exports, stockpiles, contract structures, and the non-Chinese HREE projects now advancing
Rare Earth Exchangesโ view:
- Signal: Dy exports are being rationed to a tight club (Korea, Japan, Estonia). U.S. access remains political and inconsistent.
- Counter-signal: Tb can spike at Beijingโs discretion โ and prices remain lower, not signaling crisis.
- Conclusion: HREE risk is real, but the primary bottleneck today is policy, not physical scarcity.
For investors, that argues for measured exposure to credible ex-China HREE projects and midstream processors, not panic-driven accumulation of spot metals promoted as โlast chanceโ buys.
Summary
Rare Earth Exchanges evaluates a metal trading houseโs interpretation of Chinaโs October 2025 dysprosium and terbium export data. It explains that Dyโs collapse is licensing-driven, that Tbโs surge to the U.S. is more political than structural, and that magnet supply risk now stems mainly from Beijingโs export-control machinery. It also highlights the trading houseโs commercial incentives and provides a balanced investment outlook centered on policy chokepoints rather than raw scarcity.
ยฉ 2025 Rare Earth Exchangesโข โ Accelerating Transparency, Accuracy, and Insight Across the Rare Earth & Critical Minerals Supply Chain.
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