Highlights
- The U.S. and the Philippines signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on February 4, 2026, to cooperate on critical minerals processing.
- This agreement aims to shift Manila from being a raw ore exporter to a potential processing hub within a U.S.-led bloc designed to reduce dependence on China.
- Washington is supporting this policy with operational price floors, including a $110/kg floor for NdPr oxides via MP Materials, indicating coordinated demand support and predictable pricing for allied processing capacity.
- Despite strategic alignment, the Philippines currently lacks commercial-scale rare earth processing infrastructure.
- Turning this policy vision into operational supply requires a capital-intensive buildout, permitting, and years of execution.
The United States and the Philippines have agreed to work together on critical minerals and rare earths, with Manila positioning itself as a future processing hub rather than just an exporter of raw ore. The deal, signed on February 4 on the sidelines of the 2026 Critical Minerals Ministerial in Washington, places the Philippines inside a growing U.S.-led effort to reduce dependence on China-dominated supply chains. For investors, this is a signal of policy alignmentโnot yet proof of near-term supply.
What Was Actually Signedโand What Wasnโt
The agreement reported via the Philippine News Agency (opens in a new tab) is a memorandum of understanding, not a binding investment contract. It commits both governments to cooperate on mining,refining, processing, recycling, research, and information sharing, withan explicit goal of diversifying supply chains and encouraging domestic value-added production in the Philippines. Philippine officials framed the MoU as a shift away from exporting raw ores toward local processing, job creation, and higher-value participation in global supply chains.
This aligns cleanly with Washingtonโs broader strategy. At the ministerial, the U.S. State Department confirmed it is assembling a preferential trading bloc for critical minerals, coordinating allies on demand support, stockpiling, and project financing to bypass China-centric systems U.S. Department of State. The Philippines now joins partners such as Australia, Canada, Japan, South Korea, the UK, Malaysia, and Thailand.
The Price Signal Behind the Diplomacy
What makes this deal more than symbolism is the pricing architecture emerging from Washington. During the ministerial, Vice President J.D. Vance outlined plans for coordinated price floors across critical minerals. The U.S. has already set a $110/kg price floor for NdPr oxides via long-term arrangements with MP Materials, demonstrating that this policy is operational, not theoretical. The message to partners like Manila is clear: processing capacity may be backed by predictable demand and pricingโif projects materialize.
Where Optimism Runs Ahead of Reality
Here is the hard part: the headlines glide past. The Philippines has limited rare earth processing, separation, and magnet-grade infrastructure today. Becoming a โglobal processing hubโ requires capital-intensive solvent extraction, wastehandling, skilled labor, permitting, and years of execution. An MoU does not solve that. Nor does it erase competition from China, which still dominates processing and sets reference prices.
The REEx Read
Accurate core: policy alignment, bloc-building, and a real shift toward price floors and stockpiles.
Speculation risk: timelines, scale, and Manilaโs near-term ability to process rare earths at commercial volumes.
Whatโs notable is not the ink on the MoU. Itโs that processingโnot miningโis now the explicit battleground, and Washington is willing to shape markets to win it.
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