Highlights
- SAM signed a six-year MOU with Malaysia's Department of Mineral and Geoscience, deepening government ties at its Tenggaroh project.
- Through 40% ownership of MCRE Resources, SAM participates in a rare commercial ionic adsorption clay operation producing heavy rare earth carbonate outside China.
- Heavy rare earths dysprosium and terbium are critical for EV motors, wind turbines, and defense magnets, yet most of MCRE's output still flows into China's refining ecosystem.
- SAM trades at roughly SGD274 million market cap against SGD266 million in trailing revenue, SGD111 million cash, and 95% year-over-year quarterly revenue growth.
- The market continues to price SAM as an iron ore company, potentially overlooking its position as one of the world's most strategically important heavy rare earth producers.
Southern Alliance Mining (SGX: QNS) known as “SAM” inked a six-year memorandum of understanding (opens in a new tab) with Malaysia's Department of Mineral and Geoscience (JMG Johor (opens in a new tab)) to strengthen exploration at its Tenggaroh project. While the announcement centers on gold and broader mineral exploration, Rare Earth Exchanges® believes investors are looking in the wrong place. The real story is that SAM has quietly become one of the world's most strategically important producers of ionic adsorption clay (IAC)-derived heavy rare earth carbonate outside China.

The MOU Is Not the Story—SAM Is
The agreement provides access to government geological expertise, historical datasets, and scientific collaboration while reinforcing Malaysia's commitment to responsible mineral development. It also strengthens SAM's relationship with the country's principal mineral authority—an increasingly valuable strategic asset. But investors should step back.
Through its 40% ownership of MCRE Resources, SAM already participates in one of the few commercial ionic adsorption clay operations producing mixed rare earth carbonate outside China. Unlike many Western developers still pursuing feasibility studies, permitting, or financing, SAM is connected to an operating heavy rare earth supply stream.
That distinction matters.
Heavy Rare Earths Are the Real Prize
Heavy rare earths—including dysprosium and terbium—remain among the most strategically constrained materials in the permanent magnet supply chain. They are essential for high-temperature magnets used in electric vehicles, robotics, wind turbines, aerospace, and defense. Yet today, the overwhelming majority of MCRE's rare earth carbonate ultimately enters China's downstream separation and refining ecosystem. That is the geopolitical paradox: production outside China does not automatically create supply-chain independence from China.
Rare Earth Exchanges Take
SAM increasingly appears undervalued relative to its strategic importance. The company carries a market capitalization of roughly SGD274 million while generating approximately SGD266 million in trailing twelve-month revenue, maintaining over SGD111 million in cash against only SGD14 million of debt, and growing quarterly revenue by approximately 95% year over year. Although profitability remains affected by its legacy iron ore business and investment phase, the balance sheet provides unusual financial flexibility for a company controlling exposure to producing heavy rare earth assets.
Unlike many rare earth companies valued primarily on future potential, SAM combines existing operations, strong liquidity, insider alignment exceeding 80%, and exposure to one of the world's few producing ionic clay heavy rare earth systems. As Rare Earth Exchanges has argued repeatedly, the market continues to value SAM largely as an iron ore company. Increasingly, it should be asking whether it is actually looking at one of the world's most strategically overlooked heavy rare earth companies.
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