Highlights
- Massachusetts-based Phoenix Tailings recycles mining waste to extract critical rare earth elements for EVs, defense, and electronics.
- Company aims to expand from 40-ton to 4,000-ton annual capacity.
- Backed by BMW, Yamaha, Sumitomo, and U.S. Department of Energy.
- Strategic effort to challenge China's 70% global rare earth production.
- Enhance U.S. supply chain independence.
Phoenix Tailings, (opens in a new tab) a Massachusetts-based rare earth metals refiner, is planning an initial public offering (IPO) within the next three years, according to CEO and co-founder Nick Myers. The company, founded six years ago, recycles mining waste to extract critical rare earth elementsโvital to EVs, defense systems, and electronics.
Currently operating a 40-ton-per-year facility in Massachusetts, Phoenix Tailings just launched a New Hampshire plant with 200-ton annual capacity and plans to scale further with a 4,000-ton-per-year refinery in West Virginia, Nevada, or Texas. The firm has received backing from the venture arms of BMW, Yamaha, and Sumitomo, as well as funding from the U.S. Department of Energy.
Phoenix Tailingsโ growth comes amid a strategic shift in the U.S. and allied nations to break Chinaโs dominance in the rare earth supply chain. China holds a considerable amount of global reserves and accounts for 70% of mined production. As such, Phoenixโs domestic refining push is both a commercial and geopolitical play, offering a critical piece of a more secure and independent rare earth ecosystem.
See the Bloomberg News (opens in a new tab) report by Elise Harris & James Mayger.
To go public, a rare earth refining company typically must demonstrate commercial readiness, stable offtake agreements, and meaningful progress in project development or operations. Investors expect the company to have completed feasibility studies (ideally a definitive feasibility study), secured necessary permits, and shown the ability to produce separated rare earth oxides at scale.
Capital markets also look for signed contracts or letters of intent with downstream customersโespecially in magnets, defense, or clean tech industriesโto validate demand. While pre-revenue companies can IPO on junior exchanges (like Canadaโs TSX-V), larger markets (e.g., NASDAQ, ASX main board, LSE) favor companies with at least early revenue and a clear path to positive EBITDA within a few years. Typical revenue targets vary, and of course, there are upstart publicly traded prospectors with little revenue, but $50โ$100 million annually with a clear upward trajectory is often a threshold for serious institutional interest.
Rare earth refiners are judged not only by revenue, but also by their strategic relevance. Margins can be tightโoften in the 10โ20% range, depending on the product mixโbut growth potential is what drives valuations. Companies positioned to supply neodymium, praseodymium, dysprosium, and terbiumโcritical for magnets in EVs, wind turbines, and defenseโat non-chain facilities carry significant geopolitical and commercial value. What makes rare earths unique is the vertically integrated, state-backed dominance of China, which controls over 85% of global separation capacity. Refiners outside China are not just commodity playsโthey're national security assets. This gives rare earth companies a rare blend of industrial, policy, and ESG upside, if they can scale cleanly and secure feedstock.
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