Highlights
- Hancock Prospecting has built a ~$3B+ rare earth portfolio across producers (Lynas, MP Materials), FID-stage projects (Arafura), and explorers, representing ~15% of global NdPr supply and dominant ex-China exposure—but the strategy follows its traditional upstream-only model despite rare earths requiring midstream control.
- The portfolio's key strengths include strong NdPr exposure (~30,000 tpa) and lifecycle coverage, yet it has critical gaps: minimal heavy rare earth (Dy/Tb) depth at scale and no direct control of processing—the true bottleneck where value is captured and China dominates.
- The inflection point is clear: if Hancock moves downstream into processing (via expansion, acquisition, or build) and secures HREE exposure through targets like Northern Minerals or VHM Limited, it could shape ex-China supply chains; otherwise, it remains a well-positioned but ultimately dependent upstream player.
Hancock Prospecting (opens in a new tab) has built its success on a very clear principle:
Control the resource. Let others handle the rest. The core Rare Earth Exchanges™ (REEx) investment thesis for Hancock Prospecting is straightforward: The investment thesis behind Hancock Prospecting’s rare earth strategy isstraightforward: owning the resource is no longer enough—controlof processing and access to critical materials will determine who captures value. With a diversified ~$3B+ portfolio spanning producers, developers, and explorers—including Lynas, MP Materials, and Arafura—Hancock has built meaningful exposure to NdPr, the key magnet input for EVs, wind turbines, and defense systems, potentially representing ~15% of global supply and a dominant share of ex-China output over time, assuming successful execution. However, the strategy largely follows an upstream model, relying on partners for processing—despite the reality that the true bottlenecks lie in midstream separation and heavy rare earths like dysprosium and terbium. Without control of these chokepoints, Hancock remains exposed to capacity constraints and external dependencies, many still tied to China. The inflection point is clear: if Hancock moves downstream and secures heavy rare earth exposure, it could help shape ex-China supply chains; if not, it risks remaining a strategically positioned but ultimately dependent upstream player.
Across iron ore, this has meant focusing on discovery, development, and production — while leaving steelmaking and downstream processing to partners, customers, and joint ventures. That same philosophy is now visible in rare earths. But the rare earth sector is different.
And that raises an important question:
Is Hancock Prospecting’s traditional upstream-only strategy sufficient — or does rare earths force a shift toward greater control of the midstream?
A Portfolio Built the Hancock Way
Hancock Prospecting’s rare earth investments are not random. They form a structured portfolio across the project lifecycle:
| Company | Country | Listing | Ownership | Share Price | Value of Stake |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lynas Rare Earths | Australia | ASX: LYC | 7.63% | A$20.38 | ~A$1.56bn |
| Arafura Rare Earths | Australia | ASX: ARU | ~15.7% | A$0.317 | ~A$141m |
| MP Materials | USA | NYSE: MP | 8.5% | US$60.99 | ~US$845m |
| Brazilian Rare Earths | Brazil | ASX: BRE | 6.40% | A$4.43 | ~A$61m |
| St George Mining | Australia / Brazil | ASX: SGQ | 6.24% | A$0.13 | ~A$31m |
Total rare earth exposure: ~ A$3 bn+
The structure is deliberate:
- Producers: Lynas, MP
- FID-stage: Arafura
- Development / Exploration: Brazilian Rare Earths, St George Mining
This mirrors Hancock Prospecting’s traditional approach:
Build exposure across time, risk, and scale.
The Key Difference: Rare Earths Are Not Iron Ore
In iron ore, the model is simple:
- Mine → ship → sell to steelmakers
Yet, in rare earths, the value chain is far more complex:
- Mine → concentrate → separation → oxide → metal → alloy → magnet → OEM
And critically:
- Value is increasingly captured midstream and downstream
- China dominates processing and magnet production (and increasingly in industry-relevant R&D)
This is where the portfolio becomes strategically interesting.
MP Materials: A Break from the Playbook?
MP Materials is not following the traditional mining model.
It is building:
- Mining (Mountain Pass)
- Separation (USA)
- Metal and alloy capability
- Magnet manufacturing (Texas)
In other words: Full vertical integration — mine to magnet
This is fundamentally different from how Hancock Prospecting has historically operated. And it raises a key question: Is MP Materials an exception — or a signal of where the industry is heading?
Will Hancock Prospecting Follow Downstream?
Based on historical behavior: Probably not — at least not directly.
Hancock Prospecting has consistently:
- Avoided operational complexity downstream
- Focused on resource ownership and capital allocation
- Allowed quality tier one partners to capture downstream margin
Even in rare earths:
- Lynas → separation (not magnets at scale)
- Arafura → oxide (not metal/magnet)
- MP Materials → downstream exposure, but via equity, not control
So, the Hancock Prospecting model likely remains: Own the upstream and scale.
What the Hancock Prospecting Rare Earth Portfolio Gets Right
1. Strong NdPr Exposure (LREE)
The portfolio is heavily weighted to NdPr, the key magnet input:
- Lynas → scaling toward ~12,000 tpa
- Arafura → 11,000 tpa with Phase 2
- MP Materials → targeting ~6,500 tpa
This implies exposure to ~30,000 tpa of NdPr Oxide over time. This would represent in 2030 around 15% of global NdPr Oxide supply. And importantly around 90% of ex-China NdPr Oxide supply.
2. Lifecycle Coverage
Hancock Prospecting has effectively built a pipeline of supply:
- Today: Lynas, MP
- Mid-term: Arafura
- Long-term: Brazil (BRE, SGQ)
This is not just investing — it is: Staging future supply exposure across decades
But What is Missing from the Hancock Prospecting Rare Earth Strategy?
Despite its strengths, the portfolio has clear strategic gaps.
1. Heavy Rare Earths (HREE) at Scale
This is the most important weakness.
- Lynas → modest HREE output
- Arafura → limited HREE contribution
- Brazilian Rare Earths → promising, but early
- St George Mining → pre-development
Yet Dy/Tb are critical for:
- High-performance magnets
- Defence systems
- High-temperature applications
There is no scaled, near-term HREE anchor in the portfolio
HREE Acceleration Targets
If Hancock Prospecting were to address this gap, logical targets include:
- Northern Minerals — Australia — ASX: NTU
- VHM Limited — Australia — ASX: VHM
- Caldera Holdings — USA — Private
Particularly:
- Northern Minerals → most advanced HREE project in Australia
- VHM Limited → strong geographic and processing synergies with Arafura
- Caldera → US-aligned, permitted, potential strategic fit
These assets would:
Balance the NdPr-heavy portfolio with critical HREE exposure.
2. Processing Control — The Strategic Chokepoint
Processing is the defining constraint in rare earth supply:
- Complex hydrometallurgy (SX, IX, cracking, leaching)
- Radioactivity (Th/U permitting constraints)
- Long permitting timelines (5–10+ years)
- Execution risk (recoveries, purity, cost)
- Limited expertise outside China
Control of processing = control of supply.
Hancock Prospecting’s Position
Through stakes in:
- Lynas Rare Earths (Australia — ASX: LYC)
- MPMaterials (USA — NYSE: MP)
- Arafura Rare Earths (Australia — ASX: ARU)
Hancock Prospecting already has exposure to the only scaled ex-China processors.
However:
- These assets are capacity constrained
- Expansion — not geology — is the bottleneck
Strategic Pathways to Processing Control
1. Expand Existing Processors (Most Likely)
Scale:
- Lynas (Mt Weld, Malaysia, Kalgoorlie)
- MP Materials (full US integration)
- Arafura (Nolans)
This enables:
- Faster,lower-risk capacity growth
- A tolling hub model for third-party feed
Potential outcome:
Hancock Prospecting becomes a clearing house for ex-China feedstock
2. Acquire Existing Processors
Potential targets:
- Solvay (Belgium — Euronext: SOLB)*
- Energy Fuels (USA — NYSE: UUUU)
- Neo Performance Materials (Canada — TSX: NEO)
- Carester (France — Private)
- ReElement (USA—Private)
- Iluka Resources (TSX:ILU)
- Koch Modular (USA—Private)
- Saskatchewan Research Council (SRC)**
- REEtec (Norway—Private)
*Multinational (carve out REE processing?) **Gov owned
This provides:
- Immediate capability/capacity
- Geographic diversification
- Permitted infrastructure
- Existing customers
3. Build a Dedicated Processing Platform
- Cracking + leaching
- Full separation (SX circuits)
- Potential downstream integration
This offers maximum control, but:
- Long lead times
- High technical risk
- Requires specialized operators
Bottom Line
Without processing control:
- Hancock Prospecting owns resources
- But does not control conversion to oxide
With processing control:
Hancock Prospecting could control the flow of ex-China rare earth supply.
REEx Final Assessment
Hancock Prospecting’s rare earth strategy is highly consistent with its broader philosophy:
- Own scarce resources
- Position early in strategic sectors
- Build exposure across the lifecycle
However, rare earths introduce a structural shift:
The mine is no longer where value is won — processing is.
Today, Hancock Prospecting’s rare earth portfolio:
- Has strong NdPr exposure
- Has excellent lifecycle positioning
- Has a meaningful scale
But lacks:
- No HREE depth at scale
- No control of processing — the true chokepoint, along with alloying.
This is the inflection point. If Hancock Prospecting moves into processing and expands its HREE, it can shape ex-China supply. If not, it remains exposed to those who do.
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