China’s rare earth magnet exports to U.S. falls for second month, reversing brief recovery

China’s rare earth magnet exports to U.S. falls for second month, reversing brief recovery


Annealed neodymium iron boron magnets sit in a barrel prior to being crushed into powder at Neo Material Technologies Inc.’s Magnequench Tianjin Co. factory in Tianjin, China, on Friday, June 11, 2010.

Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

China’s exports of rare earth magnets to the U.S. fell sharply in September, ending months of recovery as the two economic superpowers remain locked in trade disputes and Washington pushes to secure alternative supply chains.

Data from China’s General Administration of Customs on Monday showed that U.S.-bound exports fell 28.7% in September from August to 420.5 tonnes. That figure was also nearly 30% lower than a year prior.

It was the second consecutive monthly decline after a short-lived rebound that started in June, when Beijing had agreed to expedite rare earth export permits during trade talks with U.S. officials in London.

Chinese rare earth magnet companies have reportedly been facing tighter scrutiny on export license applications starting in September. The customs figures also come from before Beijing expanded its export licensing regime earlier this month.

China has a stranglehold on the production of rare-earth permanent magnets, with an estimated 90% of the market, and a similar dominance in refining the elements used to make them, according to the International Energy Agency. 

The magnets are vital for technologies such as electric vehicles, renewable energy, electronics and defense systems. Beijing’s previous restrictions caused shortages and supply disruptions across industries earlier this year.

China’s export curbs have also extended beyond just the U.S., with total rare earth magnet shipments falling 6.1% in September from August, according to customs data. 

The disruptions have prompted the U.S. and its partners to accelerate efforts to build alternative rare earths and critical mineral supply chains. 

On Monday, the U.S. and Australia signed a minerals deal worth up to $8.5 billion. The agreement includes funding for multiple projects to boost supplies of rare earth and critical mineral materials used in defense manufacturing and energy security.

The deal comes as U.S.-based Noveon Magnetics signed a memorandum of understanding with Australia’s Lynas Rare Earths earlier this month to form a strategic partnership aimed at developing a scalable American supply chain for rare earth magnets.

However, manufacturing rare earth magnets is highly complex and relies on upstream rare earth element mining and refining operations. 

Currently, only a handful of U.S. companies manufacture magnets domestically, with many in the early stages of production.



Source

Applied Digital signs  billion AI factory lease with U.S. based hyperscaler
Technology

Applied Digital signs $5 billion AI factory lease with U.S. based hyperscaler

Applied Digital said on Wednesday that it signed a $5 billion infrastructure lease agreement with a U.S. hyperscaler. Shares of the data center company dropped more than 7% following the announcement, continuing a recent slumped that’s sent the stock down over 20% in the past week. The stock has still almost quadrupled this year. The […]

Read More
For workers in young, hot world of AI careers, the dream payday is as often ending as layoff nightmare
Technology

For workers in young, hot world of AI careers, the dream payday is as often ending as layoff nightmare

Jose Luis Pelaez Inc | Digitalvision | Getty Images At around the same time Accenture announced its investment in data labeling startup Snorkel AI to power its financial services clients in August, the startup announced it was laying off about 13% of its staff. It wasn’t alone. When Meta took a massive stake in Scale […]

Read More
Trump White House East Wing ballroom project got M boost from YouTube legal settlement
Technology

Trump White House East Wing ballroom project got $22M boost from YouTube legal settlement

Demolition of a section of the East Wing of the White House, during construction on the new ballroom extension of the White House in Washington, DC, US, on Tuesday, Oct. 21, 2025. Aaron Schartz | Bloomberg | Getty Images Tech giant Alphabet is contributing $22 million to help build the White House ballroom under a […]

Read More