Brazil Plays Its “Trump Card”-But Is It Real Leverage or Just Shiny Ore?

Oct 25, 2025

smiling man in a suit and tie

Highlights

  • Brazil's Mines Minister claims the country's massive rare earth reserves give it leverage in US tariff negotiations.
  • Experts note Brazil lacks the critical refining and processing infrastructure to convert resources into real geopolitical power.
  • Despite holding the world's second-largest rare earth reserves at 21 million metric tons, Brazil produces negligible output.
  • Brazil has no meaningful downstream manufacturing ecosystem, unlike China's three-decade head start.
  • The timing appears strategic as diplomatic theater amid Trump's 50% tariffs on Brazilian exports.
  • Investors should view this as resource nationalism spin rather than functional industrial capability or imminent breakthrough.

In Kuala Lumpur this weekend, the drama of geopolitics just may meet the dirt of geology. According to AFP, Brazilโ€™s Mines and Energy Minister Alexandre Silveira (opens in a new tab) has declared that his countryโ€™s mineral wealthโ€”particularly rare earthsโ€”gives it a โ€œtrump cardโ€ in tense tariff talks with the United States. On paper, heโ€™s not wrong: Brazil holds the worldโ€™s second-largest rare earth reserves after China. But as every investor in this sector knows, reserves are like uncut diamondsโ€”they glimmer only when refined, processed, and placed into a working value chain.

Source: Wikimedia

The Ground Truth: Big Numbers, Little Output

Letโ€™s start with whatโ€™s true. Covered by multiple Asian media such as Economic Times (opens in a new tab), ย Brazil does sit atop roughly 21 million metric tons of rare earth elements, per the U.S. Geological Survey. Thatโ€™s no small cache of neodymium, dysprosium, and terbiumโ€”the metals that make electric motors spin and missiles steer. American firms, including juniors backed by venture capital, have been sniffing around Brazilโ€™s ionic clays and carbonatites for years.

But hereโ€™s the rub: Brazilโ€™s actual production remains negligible.

Brazilโ€™s Mines and Energy Minister

Source: Wikipedia

The country lacks the refining and separation capacity that transforms ore into usable oxides. Thereโ€™s no meaningful domestic magnet manufacturing base, no LAMP-like plant ร  la Lynas in Malaysia, no established downstream ecosystem. To describe this as โ€œgeopolitical leverageโ€ is a bit like bragging about gold still buried under your house.

Spin, Strategy, and the Art of Political Prospecting

The timing of Silveiraโ€™s boast is telling. President Trump has levied a 50% tariff on certain Brazilian exports as part of a broader political slugfest. Tossing rare earths into the conversation adds a gleaming distractionโ€”a mineralized olive branch meant to catch Washingtonโ€™s eye. But even the Brazilian academic quoted in the piece, Gilberto Fernandes de Sรก, admits that China remains the one with the know-how. Beijing not only digs, but also separates, alloys, and magnetizes. Brazil is still learning to walk in a race Chinaโ€™s been running for three decades.

What Investors Should Really Hear

For investors, this story isnโ€™t about an imminent Brazilโ€“U.S. breakthroughโ€”itโ€™s a cautionary note about how โ€œreserve powerโ€ can be spun into diplomatic theater. The potential is real; the leverage is notโ€”at least not yet. Until Brazil converts resource nationalism into functional industrial policy, its rare earths remain more of a talking point than a trade weapon.

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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.

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