Highlights
- PM Anwar Ibrahim pushes Khazanah to accelerate a rare earth refinery deal with China, leveraging Malaysia's 16.1 million tonnes of REE worth approximately US$170-175 billion.
- Malaysia positions itself as ASEAN's rare earth hub by simultaneously hosting:
- Chinese refining
- Australian-Korean magnet manufacturing (Lynas-JS Link)
- US critical minerals partnerships
- The strategy carries geopolitical risk:
- Success means becoming a pivotal processing center
- Failure could shift Malaysia from diversification to dependency on Chinese technology
Malaysia’s prime minister has just sent a clear signal to the market: move faster. Anwar Ibrahim told parliament he wants Khazanah Nasional’s (opens in a new tab) rare earth elements (REE) investment with China accelerated, tying sovereign capital, Chinese processing know-how, and Malaysia’s own “super magnet” ambitions into one package.
Table of Contents
A Sovereign Fund, a Superpower, and a Super Magnet
According to Malaysian statements as reported in Malaysiakini (opens in a new tab), Khazanah is in early talks to co-develop a rare earth refinery with a Chinese state-owned firm, leveraging Malaysia’s estimated 16.1 million tonnes of non-radioactive REE—roughly RM809.6 billion (about US$170–175 billion) in in-situ value.
In the same breath, Anwar reassured Washington that a recently signed U.S.–Malaysia reciprocal trade agreement covering critical minerals does not “reserve” Malaysian REE for America. Instead, he spotlighted South Korea’s JS Link, which is teaming with Lynas on a 3,000-tonne-per-year NdFeB super-magnet plant adjacent to the Lynas Malaysia facility in Kuantan, Pahang.
What Holds Up—and What Needs Salt
The core facts track well with independent reporting:
- Resource estimates around 16.1 million tonnes of non-radioactive REE and ~RM809–810 billion valuation are consistent across government and industry sources.
- Reuters and others have corroborated early-stage Khazanah–China refinery talks and Malaysia’s continued ban on raw REE exports to force value-added processing onshore.
- The Lynas–JS Link magnet MoU, 3,000-tonne capacity, and Pahang location are all on record.
Where the narrative drifts toward spin is in the implied inevitability: state-friendly media frames the China partnership as a straightforward win, underplaying environmental permitting risk, ESG scrutiny, and the geopolitical leverage Beijing gains if Khazanah becomes structurally tied to Chinese technology and offtake. That’s not misinformation—but it is selective storytelling.
Magnet Hub or Geopolitical Middleman?
For investors, the real story is portfolio optionality. Malaysia is trying to host:
- Chinese-linked midstream refining,
- Australian-Korean magnet manufacturing (Lynas–JS Link), and
- U.S.-aligned “open” critical minerals partnerships—all under a continuing export ban on raw REE.
If Anwar can juggle those plates, Malaysia will become ASEAN’s pivotal rare earth processing and magnet hub. If not, Khazanah’s rare earth gambit risks sliding from diversification to dependence—only this time, the dependency is priced in ringgit and denominated in magnets.
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