Trump vs. China: Captive Markets or Captured Narratives?

Oct 10, 2025

Highlights

  • China controls 90% of rare earth processing.
  • New export restrictions target specific technologies and defense-linked exports.
  • Markets reacted instantly to Trump's claims:
    • Gold climbing
    • Oil dipping
    • Equities sliding amid supply chain tensions
  • The episode exposes systemic global industrial dependence on Chinese chemical processing and technology licensing.

A spark that shocked the markets and the world.ย  Shafaq News (opens in a new tab) amplified a Truth Social post from President Donald Trump accusing China of โ€œweaponizingโ€ rare earth exports and โ€œholding the world captive.โ€ The claim followed Beijingโ€™s announcement that it would extend export licensing to nearly all rare earth elements and related technologies. Markets reacted instantlyโ€”gold climbed, oil dipped, and equities slid, echoing 2019-style tariff tension jitters.

Shafaqโ€™s brief report accurately recounts Trumpโ€™s post, his cancellation of the planned Xiโ€“Trump meeting at APEC, and Chinaโ€™s supply dominance. Yet its framingโ€”โ€œcame out of nowhereโ€โ€”misses the backdrop: Beijingโ€™s export tightening has been telegraphed for months. As already reported by Rare Earth Exchanges (REEx), announcements No. 57 and 61, released by Chinaโ€™s Ministry of Commerce in late September, had already detailed new restrictions on rare earth elements, processing equipment, and downstream products containing even trace Chinese material.

Facts on the Ground: What Holds True

Yes, China controls the midstream of rare earths, processing roughly 90% of the worldโ€™s separated oxides and magnets. Yes, rare earths are vital to electric vehicles, smartphones, and defense tech. And yes, the new export rules raise transaction risk across supply chains that still depend on Chinese separation chemistry.

But Trumpโ€™s claim that China sent letters to โ€œevery countryโ€ and seeks to โ€œwithhold all elements of productionโ€ exaggerates whatโ€™s known. Beijingโ€™s regime targets specific elements, technologies, and defense-linked exports, not the entire global mineral system. Thereโ€™s no evidence of direct diplomatic โ€œlettersโ€ beyond formal export-control notifications.

Between the Lines: Framing and Flair

The Shafaq piece largely repeats Trumpโ€™s languageโ€”โ€œhostile,โ€ โ€œcaptive,โ€ โ€œmonopolyโ€โ€”without counterbalancing analysis or context. That framing reinforces the sense of shock rather than situating the move within Chinaโ€™s long-term leverage strategy. The article also quotes the presidentโ€™s assertion that the U.S. holds โ€œstronger monopoly positions,โ€ a rhetorical flourish with little factual basis; America dominates neither rare-earth refining nor magnet manufacturing.

To Shafaqโ€™s credit, it correctly notes that U.S. diversification effortsโ€”through allies like Australiaโ€™s Lynas and domestic players like Energy Fuels and MP Materialsโ€”remain small relative to Chinaโ€™s scale. But it stops short of linking that reality to the volatility playing out across metals and tech markets.

The Rare Earth Read

The real headline isnโ€™t Beijingโ€™s surpriseโ€”itโ€™s the systemic exposure the episode reveals (unless you are a REEx reader). Both Washington and Wall Street now see how deeply global industries hinge on Chinese chemical processing and technology licensing. Trumpโ€™s tariff threat might signal resolve, but in the short term, the leverage lies with Beijingโ€™s export valves, not Washingtonโ€™s customs desks.

Disclaimer: This article analyzes a report originating from Shafaq News, which cited statements by a political figure. The source and its claims should be independently verified before forming conclusions or investment decisions.

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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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