Highlights
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The ex-China rare earth supply chain shows real but incomplete progress, with critical bottlenecks
remaining in heavy rare earth processing and metallization despite growing capital investment and
policy support. -
While upstream mining and downstream magnet manufacturing show incremental gains, the West’s
execution continues to lag behind ambition, with slow magnet qualification and fragmented
infrastructure delaying scale. -
The central question for investors: Can the West scale its rare earth capabilities fast enough to
challenge China’s dominance, especially as China prioritizes rare earths in its latest five-year
plan?
The ex-China rare earth story is no longer theoretical—it is underway. But beneath the headlines and capital inflows, a harder truth is emerging: progress is real, yet the system remains structurally incomplete. Across upstream mining, midstream processing, and downstream magnet manufacturing, incremental gains are visible—but the critical chokepoints, especially in heavy rare earths and metallization, remain firmly intact.
This week’s REEx analysis cuts through the noise. Investors will find a clear, data-driven assessment of where the West is actually advancing—and where it is falling behind. From fragile heavy rare earth supply chains to the slow, complex ramp of magnet qualification, the report exposes a system that is building in layers, but not yet operating at scale or in sync. Policy support is accelerating. Capital is flowing. Yet execution continues to lag ambition.
The key question has shifted—and it is far more consequential: Can the West scale fast enough, and in the right order, to meaningfully challenge China’s dominance? Remember China has called out rare earth elements in its latest five year plan.
For those seeking to understand where real opportunity—and real risk—lies in the rare earth supply chain, this report provides the signal behind the narrative. The weekly report is available to REEx subscribers via MarketWatch
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