Highlights
- U.S. delegation seeks access to China’s rare earth supply, crucial for defense, energy, and high-tech manufacturing.
- China controls 70% of global rare earth supply and 90% of magnet production, giving them significant negotiating power.
- London summit underscores the strategic importance of rare earth minerals in ongoing U.S.-China economic rivalries.
Rare earth elements have once again emerged as the critical bargaining chip in the escalating U.S.–China trade war, as high-level negotiations resumed in London this week. The six-hour closed-door meeting at Lancaster House saw U.S. officials push hard for renewed access to China’s rare earth supply, with Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick declaring talks “fruitful” and set to continue.
The U.S. delegation, led by Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Lutnick, and Trade Representative Jamieson Greer, arrived with one clear objective: unlock steady shipments of rare earth materials vital for U.S. defense, energy, and high-tech manufacturing. In return, Beijing is reportedly seeking partial relief on chip design software and export controls on select jet engine components and chemicals, although restrictions on advanced AI chips, such as Nvidia’s H20, remain firmly in place.
Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng, heading Beijing’s delegation, made it clear that China seeks “mutual benefit,” not unilateral concessions, signaling its resolve even as the U.S. pressures for access to critical minerals. Notably, President Xi Jinping took Trump’s call only after delays, underscoring China’s stronger negotiating hand in the rare earth leverage.
With China still controlling approximately 70% of global rare earth supply and 90% of magnet production, Washington’s room to maneuver is narrow. Trump administration officials privately admit their top priority is securing rare earth exports, highlighting the minerals’ centrality to geopolitical strategy.
Markets responded with cautious optimism. U.S. equities rose modestly, while Chinese stocks in Hong Kong entered bull territory, buoyed by hopes of reduced tariff friction. But deep structural rivalry over tech supremacy remains unresolved.
Rare earths aren’t just materials—they are leverage. And this week’s London summit confirms what global manufacturers already fear: without China’s cooperation, the West remains dangerously exposed. There is an argument that China’s economy is nose-diving, and Rare Earth Exchanges (REEx) does believe this trade war is adversely impacting the Chinese. But which politicians have greater sway over the people, and for how long should this become a waiting game?
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