Highlights
- SCMP claims China remains 'better placed' in rare earths due to 70% mining and 90% processing control, plus decades of Global South engagementโbut this narrative downplays America's rapidly expanding toolkit of joint ventures, financing, and offtake agreements.
- China's midstream processing advantage is real but eroding fast, as Australia, Japan, the U.S., Canada, and Brazil bring funded separation capacity online, decentralizing a supply chain Beijing once monopolized.
- Investors should recognize this geopolitical framing as strategic messaging: processing capacityโnot diplomatic historyโdetermines loyalty, and the rare earth contest is now a multi-theatre scramble where narrative itself is a weapon.
A new South China Morning Post (SCMP) article (opens in a new tab) argues that China remains โbetter placedโ than the United States in the global contest for rare earths. The piece leans heavily on expert commentary suggesting that resource-rich countriesโfrom Southeast Asia to Africa and Latin Americaโprefer Beijingโs speed, financing packages, and historically deeper engagement. Itโs a polished and persuasive narrative. But investors deserve a sharper, supply-chain-grounded examination of what is real, what is selective, and what is strategic messaging.
Table of Contents
The Porcelain Mask: Smooth Claims, Tougher Reality
SCMP accurately notes Chinaโs 70% share of global rare earth ore and ~90% share of processing, and rightly points out that Beijingโs long-standing approachโbundling infrastructure, financing, local processing, and purchase guaranteesโhas created durable linkages across the Global South.
It is also correct that Trumpโs October deals with Malaysia and Thailand mark a sudden U.S. pivot to compete in the developing world for mineral accessโsomething Beijing has been doing for two decades with consistency and cash.
Where SCMP stretches the frame is in its implication that the U.S. is permanently disadvantaged because Washington arrives with โconditions,โ while China arrives with โbulldozers and deals.โ This ignores the rapidly expanding U.S. toolkit:
- MPโSaudi refining JV backed by DoD
- U.S.โUzbekistan mapping partnership with first-refusal rights
- Kazakhstan tungsten JV
- $400M+ DFC catalytic financing in multiple mineral corridors
The United States is no longer operating with diplomacy alone; it is deploying equity, price floors, co-development rights, and multi-country alliances. SCMP downplays this structural shift.ย Although Rare Earth Exchanges has suggested any material supply chain resilience requires more industrial policy and commitment than what President Trumpโs administration has extended to date.
The Dragonโs Leverage: Powerful, YesโUnassailable, No
The experts quoted emphasize Chinaโs โstickyโ dominance because it controls midstream processing. That is trueโand remains Chinaโs strongest advantage. But the article minimizes how rapidly this advantage is eroding:
- Australia, Japan, the U.S., Canada, and Brazil all have funded or near-funded separation capacity coming online.
- The U.S. now offers bankable offtakes, something the private sector could not guarantee five years ago.
- Heavy rare earth dominance is still Chinaโsโbut no longer Chinaโs alone.
Beijingโs lead is real, but โbetter placedโ is not the same as โunchallenged.โ The supply chain is shifting under SCMPโs feet suggests Rare Earth Exchanges.
Why Investors Should Care
This SCMP framingโChina steady, U.S. reactiveโis itself a geopolitical signal. Beijing wants investors to believe Global South loyalties are fixed. They are not. Processing capacity determines loyalty, and that capacity is decentralizing.
The rare earth contest is no longer a one-horse race. It is a multi-theatre scramble where narrative is now one of the weapons.ย But yes, the Trump administration had better do more to help our junior miners, processing capability, and downstream demand. Otherwise, within a year or two, there could be a crash.
ยฉ 2025 Rare Earth Exchangesโข โ Accelerating Transparency, Accuracy, and Insight Across the Rare Earth & Critical Minerals Supply Chain.
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