Highlights
- Significant price increases across rare earth metals and oxides, with some categories seeing double- and triple-digit gains.
- US-China trade tensions and strategic export controls are intensifying pressure on global rare earth supply chains.
- Manufacturers are racing to onshore and friend-shore production to secure critical raw materials for EV, defense, and renewable energy technologies.
A sharp uptick across rare earth element (REE) prices tracked by the Shanghai Metals Market (SMM) signals growing strain in global supply chains as industrial buyers brace for tariff shocks, geopolitical instability, and uncertain availability of critical raw materials used in electric vehicles, wind turbines, and defense systems.
As of April 11, 2025, across virtually every category—oxides, metals, alloys, and NdFeB scrap—prices are on the rise, with heavy rare earths like holmium, terbium, dysprosium, and gadolinium posting double- and triple-digit dollar gains. Light rare earths such as neodymium and praseodymium also surged, reflecting intensified demand and procurementanxiety amid ongoing U.S.–China trade hostilities and tighteningexport controls.
The standout price increases include:
- Praseodymium metal up $393.92/mt, averaging $72,359.13/mt
- Neodymium metal up $365.65/mt, averaging $67,164.73/mt
- Terbium metal up $17.82/kg, averaging $1,066.06/kg
- Dysprosium metal up $1.38/kg, averaging $253.68/kg
- Holmium oxide jumped $360.06/mt, with NdFeB scrap equivalents also rising
- Rare earth chloride flakes dipped slightly, suggesting volatile demand in upstream segments
What’s Driving the Spike?
Industry insiders point to a confluence of pressure points:
* The U.S. 82.4% tariff on Chinese lithium-ion battery exports has cast a shadow over EV and ESS supply chains, prompting a scramble for secure raw material contracts
- China’s strategic export controls on mid- and heavy-REEs (like dysprosium and terbium) are already being felt downstream.
- Global manufacturers are now racing to onshore or friend-shore magnet and battery production, driving up short-term demand for magnet-grade oxides and metals.
While Chinese outlets portray these price gains as symptoms of U.S. overreach, from another angle the trend reflects China’s long-standing dominance in rare earth separation, refining, and value-added magnet production. The current price environment is a wake-up call for Western governments and industries that remain largely dependent on Chinese-controlled supply chains—despite years of rhetoric on critical mineralindependence.
Scrap Market Signals–Not Enough Recycled Supply
Even the NdFeB scrap market, once seen as a buffer against fresh extraction, is heating up. Prices for Pr-Nd, Dy, and Tb recovered from waste magnets rose modestly but steadily, reflecting both increased recycling activity and insufficient secondary supply to meet demand.
A New Rare Earth Price Supercycle?
The data doesn’t lie—rare earths are tightening, fast. From concentrated ores to battery-grade alloys, prices are climbing across the board. Rare Earth Exchanges warns that unless Western markets accelerate the buildout of independent midstream and magnet manufacturing infrastructure, price volatility will persist, and industrial policy goals will falter.
As global decoupling accelerates, investors, manufacturers, and governments must rethink risk, supply, and pricing assumptions. Rare Earth Exchanges will continue to track these pivotal market shifts in real-time.
Leave a Reply