According to www.cruxinvestor.com, China retains approximately 90% of global rare earth refining capacity and approximately 70% of natural graphite processing capacity, per the International Energy Agency 2024 Critical Minerals Outlook — a concentration that intensifies supply chain risk for Western original equipment manufacturers.
Geopolitical Controls Drive Market Fragmentation
Bloomberg Intelligence projects neodymium-praseodymium (NdPr) and heavy rare earth pricing to remain fragmented between Chinese domestic markets and ex-China markets through 2030, with magnet feedstock shortages persisting for buyers restricted from Chinese supply under United States Inflation Reduction Act Section 30D Foreign Entity of Concern provisions and European Critical Raw Materials Act sourcing requirements adopted in March 2024.
Policy Mechanisms Redirecting Capital
Three coordinated policy mechanisms are reshaping investment flows:
- Chinese Ministry of Commerce export licensing on dysprosium, terbium, and graphite anode material, expanded between October 2023 and December 2024
- US Department of Defense direct purchase commitments for non-Chinese rare earth oxides under Defense Production Act Title III
- Inflation Reduction Act Section 45X advanced manufacturing production credits supporting qualifying battery components and critical minerals produced in the US
Capital Allocation Favors Compliant Developers
Equity placements across 2024 and 2025 concentrated in developers with completed definitive feasibility studies, secured infrastructure access, and confirmed strategic partners. Junior explorers lacking these attributes underperformed the VanEck Rare Earth and Strategic Metals ETF benchmark. Developers with Section 30D-compatible offtake agreements priced equity placements at narrower discounts to spot than those without such agreements.
Strategic Sourcing Now a Valuation Driver
The financial consequence is that equity valuations for developers operating outside Chinese-controlled refining now incorporate a price differential that spot-price models referencing Shanghai Metals Market or Asian Metal indices do not capture. Investors evaluating exposure must screen for: definitive feasibility study economics with named source documents; permitting status within stated regulatory windows; and offtake routes qualifying under Section 30D Foreign Entity of Concern compliance.
“The world wants to see fast and quick solutions, and you don’t get there with a fragment.” — Mark Chalmers, Chief Executive Officer of Energy Fuels
The US and European Union announced expanded coordination on critical minerals in 2025 under the Minerals Security Partnership framework, building on the 2023 European Critical Raw Materials Act and the 2022 United States Inflation Reduction Act. Eligible projects — those qualifying for Section 30D consumer credit eligibility, satisfying Critical Raw Materials Act sourcing thresholds, and operating within stable permitting regimes — gain access to sovereign-backed financing via Export Development Canada, the US Export-Import Bank, and the European Investment Bank.
Source: www.cruxinvestor.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.









