Highlights
- U.S. rare earth stocks like MP Materials surged 50%+ amid trade tensions, but China still dominates 69% of mining, 92% of refining, and 98% of magnet production globally.
- The REEx ETF model provides diversified exposure across the entire ex-China rare earth value chain, delivering 207.7% five-year returns while outperforming NASDAQ 100 and S&P 500.
- Single-stock bets miss critical bottlenecks in separation, refining, and magnet productionโinvestors need supply-chain-wide exposure to capture decade-long rare earth independence buildout.
Wall Street has a new crushโrare earth elements. ย Thatโs right, in the wake of renewed U.S.โChina trade tensions, rare earth stocks have lit up trading screens again. Barchartโs (opens in a new tab) Ian Cooper points out that names like MP Materials (NYSE: MP) and USA Rare Earth (USAR) surged more than 50% after Beijingโs latest hint at export restrictions.
But even with short-term fireworks, the underlying story is unchanged: China controls 69% of global rare-earth mining, 92% of refining, and 98% of magnet production. Until that structure changes, rallies in individual U.S. names remain reactive bursts, not sustained bull markets.
Table of Contents
The ETF That Looks Beyond the Headlines
The U.S. & Allied Rare Earth Supply Chain ETF (REEx), currently a model and NOT a marketed ETF fund, takes a broader, more disciplined approach. Unlike single-stock bets, it spreads exposure across the entire ex-China rare-earth value chain โ from miners and refiners to magnet manufacturers.
Top holdings include Lynas Rare Earths, MP Materials, Shin-Etsu Chemical, Neo Performance Materials, and Arafura Rare Earths. By capturing both light and heavy REE producers, processors, and downstream magnet makers, the ETF mirrors the real industrial ecosystem rather than speculative news spikes.
Performance speaks: according to its fact sheet (page 1), REEx delivered a five-year cumulative return of 207.7%, outpacing both the NASDAQ 100 (+178%) and the S&P 500 (+105%) โ while maintaining a low 0.15 correlation to the S&P, meaning true diversification.
Why Single-Stock Exposure Isnโt Enough
MP Materials remains Americaโs flagship producer, but even at its planned 10,000-ton magnet output (assuming flawless execution in the next 24 to 36 months) it covers barely 20% of U.S. demand. USA Rare Earthโs Stillwater plant and Round Top deposit remain pre-revenue.
Betting exclusively on these firms is akin to wagering on one stage of a multi-stage relay. The bottleneck isnโt just mining; itโs separation chemistry, metallization, alloying, and magnet fabrication โ areas where Western capacity is thin and capital-intensive.
The REEx PerspectiveโInvest in Systems, Not Symbols
For investors, the rare-earth sector demands a holistic view, not a trade-war reflex. ETFs like REEx aggregate global ex-China champions while smoothing single-asset volatility. They also align with policy tailwinds โ the U.S., Australia, Japan, and EU initiatives financing new refining and magnet lines.
The takeaway: rare-earth independence is a decade-long build, not a one-week chart. Retail and institutional investors should treat the sector like infrastructureโbest owned through diversified, supply-chain-wide vehicles rather than individual fliers.
Note, at this point, the REEx ETF is a model and not a marketed fund. We are currently in discussions with multiple financial institutions to evolve from model to marketed security.
ยฉ 2025 Rare Earth Exchangesโข โ Accelerating Transparency, Accuracy, and Insight Across the Rare Earth & Critical Minerals Supply Chain.
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