Highlights
- Germanium prices in China have surged ~83% since late 2025, reaching $3,200–$3,500/kg, driven by AI fiber optic infrastructure demand.
- U.S. buyers face a stark premium, paying $5,700–$7,000/kg or more due to China's export licensing restrictions and limited Western refining capacity.
- AI data centers require up to 36 times more optical fiber than conventional servers, making germanium tetrachloride a foundational AI infrastructure material.
- Meta's $6 billion commitment to Corning signals how seriously hyperscalers are racing to secure optical connectivity for next-generation AI deployments.
- The biggest investment opportunity may lie not at the mine but in the trading and processing networks bridging China's export controls and Western demand.
Germanium has quietly become one of AI's most important critical minerals. As hyperscale data centers drive unprecedented demand for fiber optic networks, prices have surged both inside and outside China. Yet the biggest story may not be the metal itself—it may be the widening gap between Chinese domestic prices and what Western buyers are forced to pay. Rare Earth Exchanges® view: Germanium is emerging as another example of how China's dominance of critical mineral processing creates pricing power that extends well beyond the mine. Investors should watch not only producers but also refiners, distributors, and trading houses positioned between constrained supply and desperate industrial buyers.
The AI revolution runs on semiconductors—but it also runs on glass.
Every new AI data center requires enormous quantities of high-performance optical fiber to move data between processors. Germanium tetrachloride is the essential dopant that enables ultra-low-loss fiber, making germanium an increasingly strategic material as hyperscalers race to build next-generation computing infrastructure.
Chinese market tracker SunSirs (opens in a new tab) reports domestic germanium prices have climbed roughly 83% since late 2025, reaching approximately 23,000–25,000 RMB per kilogram—about US$3,200–3,500/kg. Industry observers attribute much of the increase to surging fiber optic demand tied to AI infrastructure.
Global fiber manufacturing capacity is tightening as AI and defense demand accelerate, and AI data centers may require up to 36 times more optical fiber than conventional server installations. Earlier this year, Meta committed as much as US$6 billion to Corning (opens in a new tab) to secure optical connectivity for future AI deployments. But perhaps the most revealing signal is price divergence.
Germanium prices in the United States have moved into an entirely different pricing regime than those inside China, underscoring the growing strategic premium attached to secure, non-Chinese supply. Depending on purity, transaction size, and delivery terms, U.S. buyers are currently paying approximately US$5,700 to US$7,000 per kilogram (and even far higher in some cases as we discuss below) compared with roughly US$3,200–3,500/kg in China's domestic market.
Warehouse inventories in the United States typically trade in the US$5,700–6,200/kg range and up, while small-lot, ultra-high-purity (99.99%) material can command prices approaching US$7,000/kg or far more, even crossing $10,000+/kg and in surges nearly double that. The widening gap—often exceedingly far more than Chinese domestic prices and, in some transactions, considerably higher—reflects more than simple supply and demand.
China's export licensing regime has constrained spot availability, while booming demand from AI-driven fiber optic networks, defense systems, infrared optics, semiconductors, and space-grade solar cells continues to outpace Western refining and inventory capacity. The result is a fragmented, opaque Western market where refiners, distributors, and strategic metals traders can command substantial premiums for immediately available material, creating one of the most striking pricing disparities in today's critical minerals supply chain.
REEx Take
Germanium is no longer simply a specialty metal for infrared optics and defense. It is becoming foundational AI infrastructure. The next question for investors is not whether demand will continue to rise—it is who captures the margin. Increasingly, the answer may lie less at the mine than in the opaque trading and processing networks that bridge China's export controls and the West's urgent need for secure supply.
A Sample of Traders
| Company | Headquarters | Primary Focus |
|---|---|---|
| China Germanium Co., Ltd. | Wuhan, China | Integrated producer of germanium metal, germanium dioxide, infrared optics, optical fiber materials, and specialty germanium products. One of China's leading producers |
| Yunnan Lincang Xinyuan Germanium Industry Co., Ltd | Yunnan, China | Mining, refining, germanium metal, germanium dioxide, optical-grade materials, and infrared applications |
| Yunnan Chihong Zinc & Germanium Co., Ltd | Yunnan, China | Recovers germanium as a byproduct of zinc smelting; major supplier of refined germanium and zinc products |
| 5N Plus Inc | Montreal, Quebec, Canada | High-purity specialty metals and compounds including germanium for aerospace, defense, semiconductors, photovoltaics, and infrared optics |
| PPM Pure Metals GmbH | Langelsheim, Germany | High-purity germanium refining and specialty compounds serving semiconductor, electronics, and research markets |
| Pronto Recovery | Chicago, IL, USA | Specialty germanium and gallium |
| Indium Corporation | Clinton, New York, USA | Distributor and processor of germanium metal and compounds; recycling, reclaim, electronics, defense, aerospace, and optical applications |
| Umicore | Brussels, Belgium | Advanced materials company recovering and refining germanium through recycling and specialty materials processing for optics, electronics, and renewable energy |
| Mitsubishi Materials Corp | Tokyo, Japan | High-purity materials, semiconductor inputs, and specialty germanium products for electronics and optical applications |
| DOWA Holdings Co., Ltd | Tokyo, Japan | Recovery and refining of germanium and other critical metals from mining and recycling streams |
| Teck Resources Ltd | Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada | Major zinc producer recovering germanium as a byproduct; supplier of feedstock into downstream refining |
| Tradium GmbH | Frankfurt, Germany | Strategic metals trader and distributor specializing in germanium, gallium, indium, hafnium, rhenium, and other critical minerals |
| Neo Performance Materials | Toronto, Ontario, Canada | Specialty materials producer with some germanium-related products and advanced materials distribution; stronger in rare earths but active in adjacent critical materials |
Register today: REEx Marketplace™ (opens in a new tab)
0 Comments
No replies yet
Loading new replies...
Moderator
Join the full discussion at the Rare Earth Exchanges Forum →