Highlights
- New global study reveals China's dominance over rare earth processing creates systemic financial risk for AI-driven fintech industries, not just manufacturing concerns.
- Rising rare earth pricesโamplified by geopolitical shocks like the Russia-Ukraine warโdirectly suppress fintech productivity over time, with few substitutes available.
- Financial hedges like inflation-linked bonds provide only temporary relief; true resilience requires diversifying rare earth processing capacity beyond China's control.
A new global study led by Md. Monirul Islam (opens in a new tab) along with Faroque Ahmed, both with University of Dhaka, Abdulla Al Mahmud, Sakarya University, and Muhammad Shahbaz, Beijing Institute of Technology, delivers a clear warning for policymakers, investors, and technology leaders (opens in a new tab): Chinaโs dominance over rare earth processing is no longer just a manufacturing riskโit is now a systemic financial risk for AI-driven fintech industries worldwide.
Drawing on high-frequency global data from 2020โ2023, the authors show that rising rare earth pricesโamplified by geopolitical shocks such as the RussiaโUkraine warโdirectly suppress fintech productivity over time, while inflation-linked sovereign bonds can partially cushion short-term damage. The studyโs central message is simple but unsettling: as AI finance grows, it becomes increasingly hostage to rare earth supply chains controlled far upstreamโand largely outside market discipline.
Table of Contents
Study Design: Following the Shockwaves, Not the Averages
Rather than relying on traditional โaverage effectโ models, the researchers use quantile-based econometric toolsโcross-quantilograms, recursive cross-quantilograms, and quantile vector autoregression (QVAR). In plain English, this means they track how shocks behave during extremes: market crashes, price spikes, and geopolitical crises, not just calm periods.
The dataset spans daily global indicators, including:
- Rare earth import prices
- Metallic mineral prices (e.g., copper, nickel)
- Sovereign inflation-linked bonds
- RussiaโUkraine geopolitical risk indices
- A global index of AI-driven fintech output, covering hardware, software, and AI-as-a-service infrastructure
This approach allows the authors to answer a crucial question often ignored in policy debates: What happens to AI-finance when things go wrong?
Key Findings: Rare Earths Bite Harder Than Investors Expect
The results are striking and highly relevant to the rare earth supply chain:
1. Rare earth prices suppress fintech output over time.
When rare earth prices riseโespecially during prolonged or stressed market conditionsโAI-driven fintech productivity falls. This reflects higher costs for chips, servers, data centers, and AI hardware that fintech platforms depend on. Unlike bulk metals, rare earths have few substitutes and highly concentrated processingโprimarily in China.
2. Metallic minerals matter less than rare earths.
Base metals show mixed or weak effects on fintech output. This underscores a key REEx point: not all minerals carry equal strategic weight. Rare earths sit at the critical choke point.
3. Geopolitics magnifies the damage.
RussiaโUkraine geopolitical risk consistently dampens fintech output, particularly in bearish markets. These shocks propagate through energy prices, inflation, andโcriticallyโmineral supply chains already stretched by concentration.
4. Inflation-linked sovereign bonds offer a short-term buffer.
Sovereign inflation-linked bonds help stabilize fintech investment during inflationary spikes, acting as a temporary financial shock absorber. However, their protective effect fades over longer horizons and does not resolve underlying material dependency.
Where China Enters the Picture
While the study does not name China repeatedly, the implication is unmistakable. Rare-earth price volatility is not randomโit reflects structural concentration in processing and refining, with China dominating global capacity. When geopolitical stress rises, or export controls tighten, prices spike, and AI-fintech sectorsโfar downstreamโpay the price.
In effect, Chinaโs rare earth processing monopoly becomes a hidden tax on global digital finance.
Implications: This Is No Longer Just a Mining Story
For investors and governments, the message is direct:
- AI-driven fintech is now a resource-dependent industry, not a purely digital one
- Financial hedges (like inflation-linked bonds) help, but cannot substitute for supply-chain resilience
- Diversifying rare earth processingโnot just miningโis essential to protect future financial innovation
This reinforces a core REEx thesis: control over processing equals control over value, stability, and strategic leverage.
Limitations and Contested Areas
The study is global and macro-level. It does not model individual countriesโ processing capacity, firm-level supply contracts, or alternative hedges such as green bonds. Quantile methods also reveal correlation under stress, not direct causality. Future work could integrate country-specific rare earth refining data and explicit China-centric supply constraints.
Still, the direction of risk is unambiguous.
REEx Conclusion
This research reframes rare earths as financial infrastructure, not just industrial inputs. As AI-driven fintech scales, its exposure to China-centric rare earth processing growsโquietly but powerfully. Without decisive action on processing diversification, tomorrowโs digital finance may remain built on an increasingly fragile foundation.
Citation: Islam, M.M., Ahmed, F., Al Mahmud, A., & Shahbaz, M. (2025/2026). Rare Earth Prices, Geopolitical Risk, and AI-Driven Fintech Output: Evidence from Quantile Spillover Analysis.
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