REEx Reality Check: Global Magnet Deals – What’s Real, What’s Rhetoric?

Aug 8, 2025

Highlights

  • Australian Strategic Materials shipped first commercial heavy rare earths metals to Neo's Magnequench.
  • Korean magnet player JS Link signed MoU with Lynas for 3,000 t/y NdFeB magnet plant in Malaysia.
  • Noveon Magnetics secured multi-year supply deal with General Motors, signaling industry efforts to counterbalance China's export controls.

Fastmarketsโ€™ piece (opens in a new tab) today by Solomon Cefai highlights a flurry of supply chain maneuvers outside China: Australian Strategic Materials (opens in a new tab) (ASM) shipping its first commercial heavy rare earths metals to Neoโ€™s Magnequench, Korean magnet player JS Link (opens in a new tab) signing an MoU with Lynas to site a 3,000 t/y NdFeB magnet plant in Malaysia, and Noveon Magnetics (opens in a new tab) securing a multi-year deal to supply General Motors. The article frames these moves as a concerted Western push to insulate rare earth permanent magnet production from Beijingโ€™s tightening export controls.

Rare Earth Exchanges (REEx) breaks all of this down.

Solid Ground โ€“ Verified Facts

  • ASM shipment โ€“ In July, Australian Strategic Materials confirmed the sale of small 2 kg batches of terbium and dysprosium metals to Magnequench. Though modest in scale, the transaction marks a symbolic step into the heavy rare earths market.
  • JS Linkโ€“Lynas MoU โ€“ Announced publicly in early August, the memorandum outlines plans for a 3,000-ton-per-year NdFeB magnet plant in Kuantan, Malaysia, adjacent to Lynasโ€™ processing facility.
  • Noveonโ€“GM agreement โ€“ Verified by Noveon, this multi-year supply deal underscores the automotive industryโ€™s heavy reliance on NdFeB magnets for electric drivetrains and other applications.
  • China export controls โ€“ Beijingโ€™s newly implemented restrictions on selected heavy and medium rare earths, along with magnets containing them, are factually confirmed and represent a clear catalyst for supply chain diversification efforts outside China.

Where the Edges Blur

The ASM sale of terbium and dysprosium is a meaningful milestone, but in scale itโ€™s barely a drop in the bucket compared to global demand. The Fastmarkets article never addresses just how much production would need to ramp up before shipments like this could put even a small dent in Chinaโ€™s dominance.

Honestly, without that context, itโ€™s easy for readers to overestimate the real-world impact.

Similarly, the JS Linkโ€“Lynas announcement is framed as a forward step for supply chain independence, but itโ€™s still just a Memorandum of Understanding. An MoU is a statement of intent, not a binding deal for supply, financing, or construction. In the rare earths sector, history is littered with MoUs that never make it off the page, and the article doesnโ€™t touch on this risk.

Finally, thereโ€™s an air of downstream optimism in the reportingโ€”that these agreements will automatically โ€œstrengthen global supply chain resilience.โ€ In reality, unless the upstream side (mining and separation) grows alongside these projects, and unless the costs can compete with Chinaโ€™s, many of these new plants could still end up depending on Chinese feedstock. Without breaking that upstream dependency, the resilience story remains incomplete.

Shaping the Story: Where the Angles Show

Fastmarkets covers commodity pricing and supply chain movements; here, the tone leans toward portraying a cohesive Western counterweight to China. Whatโ€™s missing however retail investors must understand:

  • Risk disclosure โ€“ No mention of technical, permitting, or financing hurdles that have stalled similar projects in the past.
  • Supply gap math โ€“ Absent is any comparison of these dealsโ€™ projected output versus Chinaโ€™s >90% dominance in NdFeB magnet production.
  • Chinaโ€™s role โ€“ The article sidesteps the possibility that some โ€œex-Chinaโ€ operations may still source materials from China in the near term.

REEx Takeaway for Investors

The reported deals are real and strategically relevant but remain early-stage chess moves, not ever near checkmates. ASMโ€™s sale shows capability, Lynasโ€“JS Link points to capacity ambition, and Noveonโ€“GM demonstrates OEM urgency. Yet the structural imbalanceโ€”Chinaโ€™s entrenched production scale, integrated supply chain, and pricing leverageโ€”remains.

For retail and institutional investors: watch for binding offtakes, financing closes, and upstream integration before treating these headlines as game-changers. In rare earths, the gulf between announcement and execution can swallow entire projects.

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By Daniel

Inspired to launch Rare Earth Exchanges in part due to his lifelong passion for geology and mineralogy, and patriotism, to ensure America and free market economies develop their own rare earth and critical mineral supply chains.

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