China’s Rare-Earth Gambit: Tech Stocks Crash, Miner Profits Soar Amid Trade War Escalation
12 October 2025
8 mins read

China’s Rare-Earth Gambit: Tech Stocks Crash, Miner Profits Soar Amid Trade War Escalation

  • New Chinese Curbs: On Oct. 9, China’s Commerce Ministry announced sweeping export controls on five more rare-earth metals (holmium, erbium, thulium, europium, ytterbium), bringing 12 of the 17 rare-earth elements under export restrictions aljazeera.com reuters.com. Dozens of related processing technologies and equipment were also added to the control list reuters.com 1 .
  • US Retaliation: In response, President Trump vowed 100% tariffs on all U.S.-bound Chinese goods and new export controls on software reuters.com aljazeera.com. Washington officials called the Chinese move a “hostile” step and said they’re “closely assessing” the impact reuters.com 2 .
  • Market Reaction: The news rattled global markets. Big Tech stocks fell sharply (the “trade war shockwaves have sent Big Tech shares tumblingreuters.com), while rare-earth miners’ stocks surged. U.S. miners like MP Materials and USA Rare Earth jumped double digits (MP gained ~12%, USA Rare Earth ~19% in early Oct. ts2.tech ts2.tech). Allied companies in Europe and Australia (e.g. Lynas) also saw buying pressure on expectations of Western supply-chain shifts reuters.com 3 .
  • Strategic Stakes: Rare earths are critical to high-tech and defense: they power everything from EV motors and smartphones to F-35 jets, submarines, missiles and AI chips aljazeera.com csis.org. China dominates this sector (mining ~60% and processing ~90% of global supply ts2.tech aljazeera.com), so experts warn Beijing’s move is “strategic” leverage ahead of U.S.-China talks ts2.tech reuters.com. Analysts like Tim Zhang (Edge Research) say it boosts Beijing’s bargaining power “ahead of the anticipated Trump-Xi summit” 4 .
  • Supply-Chain Split: Commentators caution this may bifurcate global tech supply chains. Benchmark Minerals’ Neha Mukherjee predicts a “structural bifurcation” with China doubling down on its own chain while the U.S. and allies rush to build alternate sources reuters.com. CSIS analysts likewise note the U.S. and partners are scrambling (see below).
  • Industry Moves: In recent weeks the U.S. government and companies have moved to reduce China-dependence. The Pentagon injected $400M into MP Materials (making DoD its largest shareholder and locking in a high price floor for NdPr magnets) csis.org. Australia’s Lynas Rare Earths has teamed with U.S. firm Noveon to provide “capacity, certainty and speed” in delivering permanent magnets to U.S. industry and defense reuters.com. Europe is also drafting laws (e.g. the EU’s Critical Raw Materials Act) to secure non-Chinese rare-earth supplies 5 .

What Happened: China’s New Controls

On Oct. 9, China’s Ministry of Commerce issued “Announcement No. 61” of 2025, dramatically expanding export controls on critical minerals ts2.tech reuters.com. Five additional rare-earth elements (holmium, erbium, thulium, europium, ytterbium) were added to the restricted list, on top of seven elements already curbed in April aljazeera.com ts2.tech. In total 12 of the 17 rare-earth metals now require special licenses for export aljazeera.com. Beyond raw elements, China also slapped new controls on processing equipment and technology needed to refine these minerals aljazeera.com ts2.tech. Notably, Chinese rules will apply extraterritorially: foreign firms using Chinese-sourced rare earths or technology must obtain Chinese approval even to export finished magnets or high-tech products reuters.com 6 .

Chinese officials justified the move on national security grounds, stressing that many rare-earth uses are “dual-use” (civilian and military) aljazeera.com. A Ministry of Commerce spokesperson warned that some foreign entities were transferring Chinese rare-earth materials for “military and other sensitive applications,” posing a security threat to China aljazeera.com. However, analysts say the timing is highly strategic. The curbs were unveiled just three weeks before a planned face-to-face meeting between President Trump and President Xi Jinping (slated for late October at the APEC summit) ts2.tech aljazeera.com. As Reuters notes, “This helps with increasing leverage for Beijing ahead of the anticipated Trump–Xi summit” 4 .

China did caveat that civilian trade wouldn’t be unduly harmed – promising to process export licenses and even allow some emergencies (medical relief etc.) as exceptions ts2.tech reuters.com. But overall the message is clear: China is signaling it can choke off supplies if pressed. CSIS experts observe that this escalates Beijing’s long-running strategy to “weaponize its dominance in rare earths” 7 .

US Response and Trade Tensions

Washington immediately fought back. On Oct. 10, President Trump announced via Truth Social a 100% tariff on all Chinese exports to the US, plus new export controls on software reuters.com aljazeera.com. The White House says it is “closely assessing” the fallout from China’s unannounced export curbs reuters.com 2 .

China reacted by calling Trump’s tariffs “hypocritical” and defending its own measures as legitimate and compliant with international norms reuters.com aljazeera.com. In a lengthy statement, Beijing characterized U.S. actions (like blacklisting Chinese firms and imposing port fees) as “double standards”, insisting it “does not want a tariff war but is not afraid of one.” aljazeera.com reuters.com. China also promised that its controls on civilian exports would not amount to an outright ban, saying any compliant civilian use applications “will be approved” 8 .

Economists and traders warn that this tit-for-tat could derail the tentative trade truce. Reuters notes the renewed tensions “rattled Wall Street”, with tech-heavy indexes falling as foreign companies dependent on Chinese rare-earth processing grew nervous reuters.com. The fear is that these clashes could scuttle the planned Xi-Trump summit, or at least make negotiations much harder. GreenPoint analyst Alfredo Montufar-Helu observes that China’s explicit explanation of its curbs “clarif[ies] the rationale” and signals “the ball is now in the U.S. court,” potentially laying a path for negotiation 9 .

Market Turmoil: Tech Slide, Miners Surge

Financial markets reacted sharply. The broad trade-war jitters sent many equities lower, but rare-earth and critical-metal stocks have bucked the trend. On Oct. 9–10, U.S. rare-earth miners jumped as investors anticipated windfalls from China’s self-imposed export squeeze ts2.tech ts2.tech. For example, USA Rare Earth (NASDAQ: USAR) – a Texas-based miner – leapt nearly 19% in one day, trading in the mid-$30s per share ts2.tech. MP Materials (NYSE: MP), the leading U.S. REE miner, climbed about 12% to multi-year highs (around $75–80) on those days ts2.tech ts2.tech. Analyst reports confirm the rally: MP’s stock is up roughly 4-fold so far in 2025 ts2.tech, reflecting renewed investor confidence in domestic rare-earth supply chains. Other specialty-mining stocks (critical metals, magnets, etc.) saw similar spikes 10 .

Conversely, many Chinese industrial and tech firms fell on the news. And major tech players (FAANG-style stocks) slid as U.S. 100% tariff news broke, echoing concerns of a renewed tech cold war reuters.com. Google and Microsoft were down on Oct. 10, and U.S. chipmakers like Nvidia and Qualcomm also saw sell-offs amid trade worries. (Notably, China has already targeted Nvidia with an antitrust probe reuters.com and recently flagged Qualcomm’s acquisitions reuters.com, so U.S. chip multinationals are on edge.)

While these shocks are short-term, analysts note that long-term expectations remain robust for rare-earth miners. Many Wall Street brokers now rate MP Materials a “Moderate Buy” or higher (average 12-month target ~$65–70 ts2.tech). Bulls argue that government contracts justify its premium: “the contract with the DoD provides reliable cash flow,” one Motley Fool analyst noted ts2.tech. However, skeptics warn that the current rally may have outpaced fundamentals – MP still runs at a loss and is investing heavily, so any slip-up could trigger a pullback ts2.tech 11 .

Strategic Implications and Supply Chains

Rare earths are often called the “vitamins” of modern tech – obscure but ubiquitous. These 17 elements are essential for powerful magnets, batteries, chips and sensors csis.org aljazeera.com. A CSIS explainer highlights their use in F-35 fighters, Navy subs, Tomahawk missiles, Predator drones, precision-guided munitions, radars and even Abrams tank armor csis.org aljazeera.com. They also underpin civilian tech like EV motors, wind turbines, smartphones and AI chips.

Because of this, China’s near-monopoly is seen as a strategic vulnerability for the U.S. and its allies. The U.S. Geological Survey reports about 70% of U.S. rare-earth imports (compounds and metals) still came from China as of 2023. CSIS analysts say until new mines and refineries come online, “China retains a significant amount of leverage over supply chains crucial for national and economic security.” csis.org ts2.tech. Indeed, China has hinted it will reject any export licenses for military end-uses, effectively aiming to prevent its rare earths from bolstering foreign defense programs 12 .

Experts warn that the West must move quickly to diversify. For example, Benchmark’s Neha Mukherjee sees the world entering “a period of structural bifurcation”: China will localize its supply chain, while the U.S. and allies accelerate their own rare-earth projects reuters.com. The EU is already tightening rules and subsidies via its Critical Raw Materials Act to lure investment in European mining and recycling ts2.tech. The U.S. has declared rare earths a national security priority, with recent emergency measures, research funding and Pentagon deals to jump-start domestic output csis.org 13 .

Industry Response: Partnerships and Production

On the corporate side, companies are racing to build capacity. In July, DoD’s $400M investment in MP Materials not only provided funding but locked in a 10-year offtake for MP’s magnets at a guaranteed floor price of $110/kg csis.org. MP is also planning a second U.S. magnet factory (“10X Facility”) to turn its separated rare earth oxide into finished magnets csis.org. Channel NewsAsia quotes Adamas Intelligence’s Ryan Castilloux calling MP’s Pentagon deal a “game-changer” for America’s ex-China rare-earth industry 14 .

Meanwhile, Lynas Rare Earths (the largest producer outside China) inked a partnership with U.S. firm Noveon Magnetics reuters.com. The deal will supply both light and heavy rare earth materials to make permanent magnets for U.S. defense, automotive and industrial users reuters.com. Noveon’s CEO Scott Dunn hailed the move as delivering “capacity, certainty and speed” to U.S. supply chains reuters.com. Lynas CEO Amanda Lacaze added it will provide U.S. manufacturers with a “secure and traceable” magnet supply chain reuters.com. These partnerships reflect a broader trend: Western companies and governments are forming vertical supply chains (mining-to-magnets) outside China.

Smaller players are also in focus. USA Rare Earth (USAR), an Austin-based miner, has seen its stock rocket from ~$6 in summer 2025 to over $30 by early October ts2.tech, on hopes that its Texas deposit and planned Oklahoma magnet plant will profit from any dislocation. (USAR recently acquired a UK alloy maker, giving it mid-stream capabilities ts2.tech.) Analysts caution, though, that such junior miners trade heavily on news and may be volatile – the SPAC-backed USAR saw 5× gains YTD but still carries high execution risk ts2.tech 15 .

Outlook: What’s Next?

In the short term, volatility is likely to remain high. If China sticks to its course, we may see periodic shocks to supply (even if major shortages are avoided by license grants). U.S. policymakers are debating further measures – some lawmakers have urged banning exports of chipmaking gear to China in retaliation reuters.com, and national-security hawks in Washington view rare earths as a new battleground.

Looking ahead, analysts expect two possible scenarios. If the U.S.-China summit proceeds and negotiations resume, there may be a temporary easing of tensions (as happened after the April rare-earth restrictions) csis.org. But any deal will still leave Western industries nervous, so long-term investments in new mines and processing will continue apace ts2.tech csis.org. In fact, some see this conflict as “long-term good news” for non-Chinese miners: it will spur more funding and government backing for alternative projects, albeit at the cost of short-term price spikes and higher costs for tech manufacturers ts2.tech 16 .

Bottom Line: China’s rare-earth clampdown marks a sharp escalation in the economic standoff with the U.S. It has immediate market impact – big losses for some tech giants, and big gains for rare-metal miners – and long-term strategic significance. Experts warn that the world is witnessing “the politicization of rare earths”, as these once-obscure elements become key bargaining chips in global power politics ts2.tech reuters.com. Policymakers in the U.S., Europe and elsewhere now face a race to build resilient supply chains for critical minerals. For investors, the current rally in rare-earth stocks may continue if tensions deepen, but caution is warranted: valuations are high and much depends on political and technological developments.

Sources: Latest news and analysis from Reuters, Al Jazeera, CSIS, and industry reports reuters.com reuters.com ts2.tech csis.org, including detailed commentary in TS2.tech and expert statements. (For full citations see text above.)

A technology and finance expert writing for TS2.tech. He analyzes developments in satellites, telecommunications, and artificial intelligence, with a focus on their impact on global markets. Author of industry reports and market commentary, often cited in tech and business media. Passionate about innovation and the digital economy.

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