LAS VEGAS, May 7, 2026, 14:01 PDT
- MP Materials topped Wall Street’s first-quarter forecasts for both revenue and adjusted earnings, with rare-earth and magnetics production climbing.
- The report dropped right as investors pick over the stock’s recent surge and its latest move into U.S.-manufactured magnets.
- What comes next: execution—scaling magnet output in Texas, ramping up the 10X plant, plus stepping up processing at Mountain Pass.
MP Materials turned in first-quarter numbers on Thursday that topped forecasts, as revenue surged 49% to $90.6 million. Adjusted diluted earnings landed at 3 cents a share. The rare-earths producer moved more neodymium-praseodymium—or NdPr—the key magnet ingredient. CEO James Litinsky pointed to “record NdPr production and sales,” noting progress at the Independence and 10X sites. MP Materials
The figures are drawing attention because MP isn’t just about mining anymore. Now, investors want to see if the Las Vegas-headquartered firm can actually link its Mountain Pass operation in California with its Fort Worth magnet facility, creating what’s known as a “mine-to-magnet” chain—from digging up ore all the way to finished magnets. On Wednesday, a Motley Fool piece called out MP’s steep stock surge, pointing out the company’s pivot into permanent magnets but flagged ongoing volatility.
Shares of MP climbed 4.26% after hours to $71.99, following results that topped analyst revenue estimates of $76.47 million and matched expectations for adjusted earnings at breakeven, Benzinga said.
Things picked up where it mattered this quarter: MP reported a 63% jump in NdPr production to 917 metric tons, while NdPr sales more than doubled—up 117% to 1,006 metric tons. Rare-earth oxide concentrate output ticked up 6%, reaching 12,983 metric tons. The magnetics unit pulled in $21.1 million in revenue, a sharp jump from $5.2 million last year.
That topped what analysts had penciled in before earnings. Zacks was looking for $74.9 million in revenue and a one-cent loss per share, cautioning that rising processing, labor, chemical, and maintenance expenses might squeeze margins as MP pushes further into separated rare-earth products and magnets.
Apple’s moves are drawing market attention. Back in July, the company pledged $500 million for American-made rare-earth magnets sourced from MP’s Independence site out in Fort Worth, Texas. Apple and MP also announced plans for a new rare-earth recycling line at Mountain Pass.
The Pentagon is the other key player here. MP last year unveiled a multibillion-dollar public-private tie-up with the U.S. Department of Defense, locking in a 10-year $110-per-kg price floor on NdPr products. The agreement also includes a second magnet facility—dubbed the 10X plant—which should push total U.S. magnet output to roughly 10,000 metric tons once it’s up and running.
Competition is heating up. On Wednesday, Lynas Rare Earths CEO Amanda Lacaze pointed out that customers are already shifting their buying patterns due to U.S. and European regulations, moving away from China-linked sources. “Changed purchasing decisions” are happening, Lacaze said, as companies try to meet new requirements. Lynas remains the biggest rare-earths producer outside China, according to Reuters. Reuters
Risks remain substantial. MP continues to lean on commodity prices, government backing, and the costly expansion of its processing and magnet output. Earlier this year, Benchmark Mineral Intelligence’s Neha Mukherjee told Reuters the rare-earth rally stemmed from solid magnet demand and China’s careful supply moves. Still, she cautioned, high prices probably won’t last.
Valuation is acting as a brake here. This week, Simply Wall St highlighted that MP’s latest rally has sparked fresh debate over whether buyers are overreaching, pointing to a fair-value estimate of $50.85 per share—well below the recent close at $66.20. The bullish thesis, they note, hangs on magnet shipment volumes, the rollout of heavy rare-earths, execution costs, and whether support holds up.
At least for this quarter, MP has a response for doubters: revenue is up, losses have narrowed, adjusted profit landed, and magnetics are gaining traction. The bigger issue is looming, though, and it’s not just about beating earnings once—it’s whether MP can ramp up quickly enough to support the steep valuation investors have placed on the U.S. rare-earths play.