By Eric Onstad
LONDON, Feb 18 (Reuters) – Prices of two key rare earths, crucial for making super-strong magnets used in EVs and defence equipment, have rallied on firm โdemand and bottlenecks in supply, above a ground-breaking price floor provided by the U.S. โlast year to miner MP Materials.
The near doubling of prices over seven months means the U.S. government will not โhave to subsidise MP Materials’ output of neodymium and praseodymium (NdPr) as long as it remains above the threshold of $110 per kg.
The rally in prices to $123 a kg, the highest since July 2022, will also boost other rare earth companies that Western governments hope will be able to cut reliance on โtop producer China.
China dominates the global โ supply chain for rare earths, accounting for 90% of refining capacity and around 70% of mined output.
“The price rally has been driven by firm downstream โ magnet demand and deliberate supply management in China,” said Neha Mukherjee, research manager for rare earths at consultancy Benchmark Mineral Intelligence.
She cautioned that the elevated prices are likely to be temporary, with a downward โcorrection expected โby the end of March.
The Chinese price of โNdPr oxide, regarded as a benchmark, has โjumped to 850,000 yuan per metric ton or $123 per kg, from $63 on July 9, when MP Materials unveiled its multibillion-dollar deal with the U.S.
NdPr prices have been weighed down by oversupply in recent years, and in March last year, they sank to 345,000 yuan, the weakest since November 2020.
“While many operations can sustain output at today’s elevated prices, the current market tightness is short โterm and does not reflect underlying market fundamentals,” Mukherjee โadded.
As part of the ground-breaking deal with MP, the โPentagon offered price support to MP for โthe NdPr it produces, based on $110 per kg to help it better โcompete with China.
The U.S. government also stipulated โthat the company halt shipments โof its mined output to China after the material had fed 7%-9% of China’s NdPr oxide production over the previous three years, according to consultancy Adamas.
The cut-off of supply โfrom MP coincided with tightened โsupply in China due to what analysts regarded as lower rare earth mining and โsmelting quotas, although the government did not make a public statement about the โquotas.
($1 = 6.9080 Chinese yuan renminbi)
(Reporting by Eric Onstad)