Highlights
- China Northern Rare Earth reported $5.9 billion in revenue (up 29%) and $313 million profit (up 124%) for 2025, maintaining its No. 1 position in China while targeting $6.1 billion revenue for 2026.
- The company is expanding beyond commodities into high-value downstream products, including permanent magnet motors, hydrogen storage materials, and 13 new product launches in 2025.
- Through strategic integration from ore to application, smart factory implementation, and optimized pricing mechanisms, China is actively reinforcingโnot looseningโits rare earth market dominance.
State-backed, but publicly traded China Northern Rare Earthโs (SSE: 600111) latest shareholder materials (opens in a new tab) read less like a routine corporate filing and more like a strategic dispatch. The message is not subtle: China is not loosening its grip on rare earthsโit is refining it.

A Record Year, Now in Dollars
The numbers, translated into U.S. terms, underscore the scale:
- Revenue (2025): RMB 42.56 billion (~$5.9 billion), up 29.1%
- Net Income: RMB 2.25 billion (~$313 million), up 124.2%
- Industry Position: Maintains No. 1 rank in China across revenue, profit and market value
- Output: Core products at record highs
For 2026, the company is targeting at least $6.1 billion in revenue and ~$486 million in profit, backed by a ~$2.85 billion credit facility to fund expansion. ย This is not incremental growth. It is scale meeting coordination.
From Oxides to Systems
The more consequential shift is structural. Northern Rare Earth is expanding across the value chain:
- Increased output in separation products, metals, magnets and polishing materials
- Growth in hydrogen storage materials and permanent magnet motors
- Launch of 13 new products in 2025
For U.S. investors, the implication is clear: this is no longer a commodity story. China is capturing value downstream, where margins and strategic leverage are highest.
Industrial Policy, Industrialized
The companyโs โgreen smeltingโ projectโPhase I operational, Phase II underwayโanchors a broader modernization push. It reports:
- Recognition as a nationalโsmart factoryโ leader
- Rising digitalization across production lines
- Full operation of environmental systems and claims of zero wastewater discharge in key regions
Some of this reads like policy alignmentโand it is. But it also reflects sustained capital deployment into the midstream, the hardest part of the rare earth supply chain to replicate.
Innovation Without Illusion
Research spending exceeds 5% of revenue. The company cites progress in:
- Rare earth motor technologies, including axial-flux designs
- Solid-state hydrogen storage systems
- High-end polishing materials and conductive alloys
- Biological recovery of rare earths from tailings
The nuance matters. This is not a leap away from existing processes. It is continuous improvement of systemsโespecially solvent extractionโthat already dominates global production.
Pricing Power, Quietly Exercised
The report points to subtle but important shifts:
- Optimized pricing mechanisms
- Expanded channels for praseodymium-neodymium (PrNd) products
- Reduction of lanthanum-cerium (La/Ce) inventories after sales exceeded production
- Increased retail participation in the sales mix
This is how market control evolvesโnot through declarations, but through inventory management and channel strategy.
What the West Should Notice
Three conclusions stand out.
- First, China is not standing still.
Production is rising, costs are falling, and integration is deepening. - Second, the midstream remains decisive.
Separation scale, process control, and downstream manufacturingโnot miningโdefine advantage. - Third, execution remains the dividing line.
Rare earth dominance is not theoretical. It is built through plants, processes, and patient capital.
Bottom Line
China Northern Rare Earth is doing what Western strategies often promise but rarely deliver: building an integrated, industrial-scale system from ore to application. The companyโs trajectory suggests that the global rare earth balance is not drifting toward diversification. It is being actively reinforced. For policymakers and investors alike, the message is unambiguous: the gap is not closing. It is being engineered.
Disclaimer: This article is based on shareholder materials from China Northern Rare Earth, a Chinese state-controlled enterprise. The information should be independently verified, and readers should consider potential bias, selective disclosure, and strategic framing.
0 Comments
No replies yet
Loading new replies...
Moderator
Join the full discussion at the Rare Earth Exchanges Forum →