Highlights
- China opened a national rare earth testing center in Ganzhou, extending industrial dominance beyond mining into standards and technical infrastructure.
- Heavy rare earth markets remain critically tight, with industry sources reporting severe difficulty sourcing dysprosium, terbium, yttrium, and samarium outside China.
- USA Rare Earth's acquisition of Brazil's Serra Verde could be transformational, but scaling from 100 to 6,000 tonnes in a year remains a major open question.
- Myanmar remains the world's most important heavy rare earth battleground as geopolitical risks rise alongside looming 2027 U.S. defense sourcing restrictions.
- The REEx Structural Momentum Index rose again, reflecting better financing conditions but persistent bottlenecks in processing and magnet manufacturing.
The rare earth story isn't about prices this week. It's about power. China continued strengthening its grip on the global critical minerals ecosystem, opening a new national rare earth testing and certification center in Ganzhou—a reminder that industrial dominance extends far beyond mines and refineries. Standards, quality control, and technical infrastructure increasingly matter as much as production itself. Last month the Chinese tightened up their mineral rules. What are they preparing for?
Meanwhile, heavy rare earth markets remain exceptionally tight. Industry sources continue reporting difficulty sourcing dysprosium, terbium, yttrium, and samarium outside China. One veteran market participant told REEx bluntly: "We're dry."
The West is making progress. USA Rare Earth continues attracting substantial financing, and its acquisition of Brazil's Serra Verde could prove transformational. But a critical question remains: can the company scale production from roughly 100 tonnes to more than 6,000 tonnes in little more than a year? The REEx ranking system still ranks Lynas Rare Earth #1 upstream ex-China, followed by MP Materials.
Geopolitical risks are also rising. Myanmar remains the world's most important heavy rare earth battleground, while developments involving Taiwan, U.S.-China relations, and looming 2027 defense sourcing restrictions continue to reshape supply-chain strategy. Myanmar Rebels holdings are ranked #1 on the REEx Insights™ heavy rare earth rankings.
Our latest REEx Structural Momentum Index rose again this week, reflecting improving financing conditions but persistent processing and magnet-manufacturing bottlenecks.
The long-term outlook remains positive for rare earth investors—not because the West has solved the problem, but because it is finally confronting the scale of it. But investors must understand the problem will be solved on industrial timelines, not political timelines. We are anticipating the potential for disruptive activity post mid-terms. There are at least two classes of investors coming to REEx: those longer-term investors looking to profit off solving the resilience problem and short-term traders seeking to profit off the volatility along the way.
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