Trump’s Rare Earth Gamble: Between Strategy and Spin

Sep 6, 2025

Highlights

  • The Financial Times profiles Trump's strategic focus on rare earths as a national security priority.
  • The U.S. Department of Defense takes unprecedented direct equity stake in MP Materials, signaling a shift in resource strategy.
  • The article highlights the complex geopolitical dynamics of critical mineral supply chains between the U.S. and China.

The Financial Times (opens in a new tab) (FT) recently profiled President Donald Trumpโ€™s second-term fixation on rare earths, casting it as resource nationalism dressed in Pentagon garb. For U.S. investors and policymakers, the story blends fact, interpretation, and a heavy dose of political critique.

FT has influence. Founded in 1888, FT is one of the worldโ€™s most respected business and economic newspapers. Headquartered in London but with bureaus worldwide, it has built a reputation for authoritative coverage of global finance, markets, and policy. The FT reaches an audience of more than 1 million paying subscribers.

The Bedrock: What Holds True

Yes, Trump has a long-standing interest in rare earthsโ€”he designated them โ€œessential to national defenseโ€ back in 2019 as he should from an American perspective. And this summer, his administration did sign an executive order declaring Chinaโ€™s control a โ€œnational security riskโ€ as Rare Earth Exchanges (REEx) covered. ย The article is accurate in noting that the Department of Defense became a major shareholder of MP Materials, committing $400 million and securing multi-year offtake agreements. That fact is a turning point: it marks one of the most direct equity interventions by the Pentagon in modern resource history.

Where Rock Meets Rhetoric

The piece paints the DoD deal as โ€œresource nationalism at its worst.โ€Thatโ€™s interpretation, not evidence. It is speculative to claimthe U.S. clean energy transition will be โ€œdismantledโ€ by Trumpโ€™s policiesโ€”regulatory rollbacks may slow momentum, but demand signals from state mandates, utilities, and automakers remain powerful. Likewise, the suggestion that this form of industrial policy only benefits โ€œwealthy shareholdersโ€ glosses over legitimate supply chain security gains.

Tilted Lens: Whatโ€™s Emphasized, Whatโ€™s Missing

The framing leans heavily into ideologyโ€”linking Trump to Pinochetโ€™s Chile and portraying U.S. industrial policy as hypocrisy. Whatโ€™s underplayed is that Chinaโ€™s own rise in rare earths was achieved through aggressive state intervention and monopolization. ย In that sense, Washington is mimicking Beijingโ€™s playbook. The omission of allied cooperation (Australia, Japan, Canada) also skews the narrative toward a U.S.-Chinabinary.

Why It Matters for the Supply Chain

For the rare earth sector, the FT report spotlights the normalization of state-backed equity stakes in strategic resources. Thatโ€™s a game-changer. Whether or not one calls it โ€œresource nationalism,โ€ the U.S. government is moving from subsidies to direct ownership. For Western miners and magnet makers, this signals a policy environment where Washington may backstop not just R&D but balance sheets.ย  Frankly REEx has called for serious critical mineral and rare earth element supply chain policy due to Chinaโ€™s monopolistic position.

REEx Take

The article is factually grounded but politically loaded. Investors should filter the rhetoric from the reality: the U.S. government is now financially tethered to its only rare earth mine. That alignment, regardless of ideology, marks a new era in American industrial policy, and in our opinion (full disclosure biased Americans), not nearly enough.

Citation: Financial Times, โ€œYour guide to what Trumpโ€™s second term means for Washington, business and the world,โ€ Sept. 2025.

ยฉ!-- /wp:paragraph -->

Search
Recent Reex News

Melissa Sanderson Warns the U.S. Is Still Behind in Critical Minerals Race

India Advances Magnet Independence with NdFeB Pilot Plant-But Scale Remains the Real Test

Neo's Europe Magnet Push Is Real-But Investors Should Watch the Cash, Not Just the Story

China Redirects Gallium & Germanium Flows-Japan Sidelined

Samarium and Defense Supply Chains: Why a โ€œMinorโ€ Rare Earth Carries Outsized Military Risk

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.

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Straight Into Your Inbox

Straight Into Your Inbox

Receive a Daily News Update Intended to Help You Keep Pace With the Rapidly Evolving REE Market.

Fantastic! Thanks for subscribing, you won't regret it.

Straight Into Your Inbox

Straight Into Your Inbox

Receive a Daily News Update Intended to Help You Keep Pace With the Rapidly Evolving REE Market.

Fantastic! Thanks for subscribing, you won't regret it.