Neo + Cyclic: Recycling Meets Magnet Manufacturing

Mar 2, 2026

Highlights

  • Neo Performance Materials and Cyclic Materials signed an MOU to explore magnet scrap recycling integration, creating a closed-loop supply chain for European operations.
  • The framework involves cyclically converting magnet waste into rare earth oxides, which Neo would reintegrate into its alloy and magnet manufacturing, reducing reliance on Chinese imports.
  • While strategically aligned with EU policy goals, the agreement is non-binding with no disclosed volumes, pricing, or capital commitments—investors should watch for execution milestones.

Neo Performance Materials (opens in a new tab) (TSX: NEO) and Cyclic Materials (opens in a new tab) have inked (opens in a new tab) a non-binding memorandum of understanding to collaborate on a closed-loop rare earth supply chain. In simple terms, magnet scrap and end-of-life magnets would be recycled by Cyclic into mixed rare earth oxides, which would then feed Neo’s alloy and magnet manufacturing operations—particularly in Europe.

This is not a merger. It is not a binding supply agreement. It is a framework to explore technical and commercial integration.

But strategically, it matters.

The Industrial Logic Is Sound

Neo is not a miner. It is a midstream and downstream rare earth company with operations in China and Europe, including separation, alloys, magnetic powders, and magnet manufacturing (notably in Estonia and Germany).

Cyclic is a recycling specialist using its MagCycle℠ and REEPure℠ processes to recover rare earths from end-of-life magnets and production scrap, with operations scaling in Arizona, Ontario, and South Carolina.

The proposed model is straightforward:

  1. Neo supplies magnet production scrap.
  2. Cyclic recovers rare earth oxides.
  3. Neo reintegrates recycled material into alloy and magnet production.

From a supply-chain perspective, this is textbook circular integration.

Where It Aligns With Policy

The press release references alignment with the EU Critical Raw Materials Act. That is plausible. The EU is explicitly seeking to increase rare-earth processing and recycling capacity within Europe.

If Neo can incorporate recycled feedstock into its European magnet platform, it will reduce exposure to virgin oxide imports—particularly from China.

That is strategic risk mitigation, not marketing fantasy.

The Fine Print Investors Must See

The agreement is explicitly non-binding. No volumes. No pricing. No offtake commitments. No capital allocation disclosed.

Government praise, including remarks from Canada’s Minister of Energy and Natural Resources, adds political tone—but does not convert an MOU into enforceable supply.

This is a framework for evaluation, not execution.

What’s Notable in the Global Rare Earth Context

Three signals stand out:

  • A major Western magnet producer is actively pursuing recycled feedstock integration.
  • Circularity is becoming central—not peripheral—to magnet strategy.
  • Trans-Atlantic positioning suggests Europe and North America are coordinating supply diversification.

This is less about headline production and more about structural resilience.

Bottom Line

Neo and Cyclic are testing whether recycling can become a reliable input stream for Western magnet manufacturing.

The industrial thesis is credible.

The structure is still preliminary.

If binding agreements follow, this could strengthen Europe’s magnet autonomy. If not, it remains an intelligent—but exploratory—alignment.

Investors should track execution milestones, not slogans.

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By Daniel

Inspired to launch Rare Earth Exchanges in part due to his lifelong passion for geology and mineralogy, and patriotism, to ensure America and free market economies develop their own rare earth and critical mineral supply chains.

1 Comment

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H
Heat.Beat

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23 messages 10 likes

Slightly off-topic but I am a little confused about the high-temp stuff; I read about both samarium/cobalt and dysprosium/terbium…do they have distinctly different applications?

Those would seem to be pretty high on .gov list right about now

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