China Rare Earth Price Index – January 26, 2026

Jan 26, 2026

Highlights

  • China's official Rare Earth Price Index rose to 242.7 on January 26, 2026—more than 2.4× the 2010 baseline—signaling a structural repricing driven by tighter export controls, producer consolidation, and accelerating global demand for magnet-intensive technologies.
  • Heavy and magnet-critical rare earths lead price momentum:
    • Terbium remains extremely tight at ¥13,950–14,350/kg
    • NdPr showed incremental strength to ¥677–697/kg for mixed oxide
    • Dysprosium softened slightly due to inventory normalization rather than weakening demand
  • The index trajectory reinforces urgent supply chain risks for Western OEMs dependent on Chinese rare earths, particularly for high-performance permanent magnets used in EVs, wind turbines, defense, and aerospace—highlighting the critical need for ex-China processing, recycling, and manufacturing capacity.

China’s official Rare Earth Price Index (opens in a new tab) rose to 242.7 on January 26, 2026, according to data released by the Association of China Rare Earth Industry. The index—benchmarked to a 2010 base year of 100 and calculated from daily transaction averages across more than 20 Chinese rare earth producers—continues an upward trend that began in mid-2025. The pattern increasingly resembles a structural re-pricing rather than a short-term cyclical rebound.

Price Momentum: Heavy Rare Earths Lead

Product-level pricing confirms that heavy and magnet-critical rare earths remain the primary drivers, while light rare earths are broadly stable:

  • Dysprosium (Dy) softened slightly:
    • Dy₂O₃: ¥6,245–6,305/kg (≈ $867–876/kg)
    • Dy metal: ¥7,730–7,830/kg (≈ $1,074–1,088/kg)
      This appears driven by short-term inventory normalization rather than weakening demand.
  • Terbium (Tb) remains extremely tight:
    • Tb₄O₇: ¥13,950–14,350/kg (≈ $1,937–1,993/kg), underscoring continued scarcity in ultra-critical magnet inputs.
  • Holmium (Ho) and Erbium (Er) prices were largely unchanged, signaling stable demand from specialty magnet, laser, and electronics applications.
  • Neodymium–Praseodymium (NdPr) showed incremental strength:
    • Mixed rare earth oxide (Nd₂O₃ 75%): ¥677–697/kg (≈ $94–97/kg)
    • Nd-rich alloy: ¥825–845/kg (≈ $115–117/kg)
      Gains reflect sustained downstream magnet demand tied to EVs, wind turbines, robotics, and automation.
    • Note: The USA federal government established $110 per/kg for NdPr for MP Materials—the Trump administration has signaled that other companies may benefit from such a pricing floor.
  • Gadolinium (Gd) products and samarium/cobalt-linked materials also firmed, reinforcing a key REEx theme: defense, aerospace, nuclear, and high-temperature magnet applications are exerting outsized pricing influence.

What the Index Is Signaling

At 242.7, the index implies that average rare earth prices are more than 2.4× their 2010 baseline, even before inflation adjustment. The steady climb since late 2025 aligns with:

  • tighter export and compliance controls,
  • consolidation among licensed producers,
  • accelerating global demand for magnet-intensive technologies, and
  • early signs of strategic and precautionary stockpiling.

Why This Matters for Western Markets

For U.S. and allied supply chains, the signal is unambiguous: China’s domestic pricing power is strengthening, particularly in Dy, Tb, NdPr, and mixed oxides essential for high-performance permanent magnets. OEMs dependent on spot or short-term contracts face rising cost volatility and supply leverage, while the index trajectory reinforces the urgency of ex-China processing, recycling, and magnet manufacturing capacity.

Disclaimer: This price review is based on data published by the Association of China Rare Earth Industry, a China-based, state-influenced industry body. Prices, FX assumptions, index methodology, and market interpretations should be independently verified using third-party, non-Chinese sources before being relied upon for investment, procurement, or policy decisions.

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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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China Rare Earth Price Index hits 242.7 in Jan 2026, driven by heavy rare earths. Dysprosium, terbium, NdPr prices signal structural repricing. (read full article...)

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