Today: 7 June 2026
Solvay Strikes Two U.S. Rare‑Earth Supply Deals as Europe Lags on Subsidies — Shares Rise on Nov. 13, 2025
13 November 2025
3 mins read

Solvay Strikes Two U.S. Rare‑Earth Supply Deals as Europe Lags on Subsidies — Shares Rise on Nov. 13, 2025

Published: November 13, 2025

Belgium’s Solvay has signed two agreements to supply rare‑earth oxides to U.S. magnet makers Noveon Magnetics and Permag, a fresh sign that demand—and government backing—in North America is pulling new non‑Chinese supply into the market. The stock reacted on Thursday, rising about 3.4% to lead Belgium’s BEL 20 index.

What happened

Solvay said the Noveon deal covers neodymium and praseodymium (NdPr) alongside the heavy rare earths dysprosium and terbium (DyTb)—key ingredients for high‑performance permanent magnets used in EVs, wind turbines and defense systems. A second agreement will see Solvay supply samarium oxide to Permag, which will be converted into samarium metal by U.K. specialist Less Common Metals. The company described the initial volumes as “limited” but emphasized that output at its La Rochelle, France, plant can scale quickly. Supplies of NdPr and samarium oxide are set to begin “very soon,” with DyTb following in 2026. Reuters

Why it matters

The United States, the European Union and allies are racing to cut their reliance on China, which dominates processing of rare‑earth elements and magnet manufacturing. Long‑term offtake contracts like Solvay’s are a prerequisite for financing separation and magnet capacity outside China—hence the outsized role of industrial policy.

Europe vs. the U.S.: The subsidy gap

Solvay’s chief executive Philippe Kehren said last week the company would consider building a rare‑earth separation plant in the United States because “support is stronger” there than in Europe—language that underscores Europe’s slower progress turning strategy into bankable incentives. The firm has yet to green‑light a €50–€100 million expansion at La Rochelle while talks with customers and governments continue. Reuters

Brussels has announced the Critical Raw Materials Act and is developing a RESourceEU scheme that includes joint purchasing, stockpiling and faster investment in strategic projects. Those steps show intent, but industry decisions are still being swayed by where offtakes and subsidies are most concrete—currently the United States.

Who are the partners?

Noveon Magnetics (Texas): A U.S. producer that began commercial sales of sintered NdFeB magnets in 2023. Noveon has also tied up with Australia’s Lynas to secure magnet supply for U.S. defense and commercial customers, highlighting a broader, U.S.‑anchored network forming around rare‑earth magnets.

Permag (U.S.): Will source samarium oxide from Solvay, with Less Common Metals in the U.K. converting it to metal. Samarium‑cobalt magnets excel at high temperatures, a niche important to defense and nuclear applications.

Market reaction today

On Thursday, Nov. 13, Solvay shares climbed roughly 3.4%, topping Belgium’s BEL 20, as investors welcomed proof of demand for non‑Chinese supply chains. Analysts at KBC Securities said the company is preparing for an additional €50–€100 million investment in rare‑earth capacity, contingent on long‑term commitments—consistent with management’s recent remarks.

The big picture: Building a magnet ecosystem

Solvay is one of a small number of companies outside China with the expertise to separate rare‑earths at commercial scale. It started modest processing runs in April at La Rochelle and can accelerate with customer and government backing. These U.S. deals add visibility on the demand side and could help unlock larger capex—whether in France or, if incentives line up, in the United States.

At the policy level, Europe is trying to narrow the gap with measures to diversify supply and expand processing and recycling at home. The EU’s planned RESourceEU approach—modeled on its energy‑security playbook—envisions joint purchasing and stockpiles to buffer supply shocks in magnets and other strategic inputs. The outcome of those initiatives will determine whether future contracts like Solvay’s land in Europe rather than across the Atlantic.

What’s next

  • Deliveries & ramp‑up: Solvay expects to begin NdPr and samarium oxide shipments soon; DyTb should follow during 2026. Watch for customer delivery milestones and throughput increases at La Rochelle.
  • Capex decisions: A final investment decision on expanding La Rochelle—or siting new capacity in the U.S.—will hinge on long‑term offtakes and subsidy packages.
  • Policy signals: Details on EU instruments (under the Critical Raw Materials Act and RESourceEU) will influence whether European projects can compete with U.S. programs that have already underwritten domestic magnet supply chains.
  • Ecosystem consolidation: Noveon’s separate partnership with Lynas suggests more cross‑company linking between miners, separators and magnet makers to meet defense and EV demand.

Key facts (at a glance)

  • Solvay signed two rare‑earth oxide supply deals: Noveon Magnetics (NdPr, Dy, Tb) and Permag (samarium oxide).
  • Initial volumes are limited; Solvay says it can scale production at La Rochelle, France, quickly; DyTb output targeted for 2026.
  • Shares up ~3.4% on Nov. 13, leading Belgium’s BEL 20 index.
  • CEO says U.S. incentives > Europe, and Solvay is open to a U.S. plant if support matches needs.
  • EU pushing Critical Raw Materials Act and a RESourceEU plan (joint buying, stockpiling), but execution speed remains the swing factor for new investment.

Editorial note on sources (Nov. 13, 2025)

This report is based on Solvay’s deal announcements and management comments reported by Reuters (Nov. 12 and Nov. 6), a Reuters market update on Solvay’s shares (Nov. 13), and EU policy documents and statements on critical raw materials. Additional industry context on Noveon’s magnet partnerships comes from prior Reuters coverage.

Tags: Solvay, rare earths, Noveon Magnetics, Permag, NdPr, Dy, Tb, samarium cobalt, La Rochelle, magnets, Critical Raw Materials Act, RESourceEU, Europe subsidies, U.S. industrial policy, supply chain, EVs, wind turbines, defense

Stock Market Today

  • UnitedHealth Group Stock Quote Price and Forecast
    June 6, 2026, 9:50 PM EDT. UnitedHealth Group, Inc. operates across four segments: UnitedHealthcare, OptumHealth, OptumInsight, and OptumRx. It provides health care coverage, software, and data consultancy services. UnitedHealthcare leverages Optum's capabilities to improve patient care coordination and affordability. OptumHealth offers wellness care and serves diverse health markets including payers and providers. OptumInsight delivers data, analytics, and technology to the healthcare sector. OptumRx manages pharmacy care services. Founded in 1977 by Richard T. Burke, the company is headquartered in Eden Prairie, Minnesota. Investors watch UnitedHealth for its integrated healthcare services model and data-driven approach.

Latest articles

UiPath Stock Set for Inflation Test After Swings in AI-Driven Trading

UiPath Stock Set for Inflation Test After Swings in AI-Driven Trading

7 June 2026
UiPath shares fell 3.68% to $11.24 Friday, wiping out Monday’s 11.77% rally despite reporting 17% revenue growth and its first-ever first-quarter GAAP profit, as a broader tech selloff and persistent analyst “Hold” ratings outweighed strong guidance and new customer wins.
Caterpillar flat at end of strong week, inflation on radar

Caterpillar flat at end of strong week, inflation on radar

7 June 2026
Caterpillar tumbled 3.85% Friday to $904.28 after hitting a 52-week high, as a strong jobs report sent Treasury yields soaring and triggered a broad market selloff; despite the drop, Caterpillar remains up 3.2% for the week, with investors now weighing its record backlog and first-quarter growth against rising rate risks and a more cautious market.
Nuclear decision gives Constellation boost, but CEG stock slides

Nuclear decision gives Constellation boost, but CEG stock slides

7 June 2026
Constellation Energy shares closed at $254.83, down 3.7% and 11% below the $287.75 price in last week’s prospectus, after a shareholder offering and despite a regulatory win for its Three Mile Island restart plan; investors now face a weekend to digest new stock supply, rate worries, and nuclear project risks before Monday’s open.
Portnoy’s Bitcoin, XRP Losses Mount In $390B Crypto Drop

Portnoy’s Bitcoin, XRP Losses Mount In $390B Crypto Drop

7 June 2026
Strategy’s surprise sale of 32 Bitcoin for $2.5 million to fund preferred stock distributions rattled investors, raising fears it may sell more to meet obligations, as Bitcoin and Ether posted their worst weekly losses since 2022 and crypto-linked stocks like Coinbase and Robinhood plunged up to 11% amid a $390 billion market wipeout.
Bitcoin Hits $60,000 As Crypto Selloff Deepens

Bitcoin Drops as ETF Outflows Mount, $60,000 Support Weakens

7 June 2026
Bitcoin plunged below $60,000 for the first time since October 2024, triggering $4.4 billion in spot ETF outflows and a rare bitcoin sale by Strategy, while crypto-linked stocks tumbled and analysts warned that further drops below $59,750 could spark more selling pressure or a deeper slide.
Michael Burry Deregisters Scion Asset Management With the SEC — Nov. 10 Termination Fuels Family‑Office Talk and a Nov. 25 Tease
Previous Story

Michael Burry Deregisters Scion Asset Management With the SEC — Nov. 10 Termination Fuels Family‑Office Talk and a Nov. 25 Tease

Robinhood’s Wild 2025 Ride: HOOD Stock Skyrockets 200%, Plunges 9% in a Day – What’s Next?
Next Story

Robinhood (HOOD) launches cash‑delivery with Gopuff; stock sinks ~9% as 2x short ETF debuts and insiders file sales — November 13, 2025

Go toTop