New York, June 1, 2026, 13:05 EDT
- MP Materials climbed $5.00, or 7.7%, to $69.70 on the NYSE, outperforming the broader market, which was mixed.
- Needham started research on MP with a Buy and an $81 target, calling MP “significantly advantaged relative to new entrants.” TipRanks
- USA Rare Earth shares gained after the company said it may invest over 175 million euros in France by 2030.
MP Materials shares moved higher Monday after Needham began coverage on the stock with a Buy rating. The stock has become a shorthand bet on U.S. rare-earth supply chains.
The stock last traded at $69.70, climbing $5.00 so far today and touching an intraday high at $71.12. That move topped gains in the SPDR S&P 500 ETF, which rose 0.08%, the Invesco QQQ ETF, up 0.45%, and the iShares Russell 2000 ETF, which slipped 0.78%. U.S. exchanges ran on a normal schedule. The NYSE’s 2026 holiday list puts the next June shutdown on Juneteenth, June 19.
Why this matters now: Investors are still figuring out how to value companies that might make magnets outside China, with Washington and its partners backing critical-minerals projects. Rare earths—17 metals used in magnets for converting power into motion—are essential for electric vehicles, wind turbines, electronics and weapons.
Needham analyst Carter Goman started coverage of MP with a Buy and a price target of $81, Benzinga said. TipRanks relayed a The Fly note, quoting Needham as saying MP is “significantly advantaged relative to new entrants” due to its Mountain Pass site and early move into downstream manufacturing. Benzinga
MP says it’s building a supply chain stretching from mining and processing at Mountain Pass in California through to magnet manufacturing at its Independence plant in Texas. The company is pointing to magnets as the higher-value part of the rare-earths chain, made from processed metals for industrial, auto and defense buyers.
MP’s latest results lifted sentiment. The company posted first-quarter revenue of $90.6 million, a 49% jump from last year. It also booked $42.3 million in price-protection agreement income—revenue linked to a price support setup. NdPr output and sales hit records in the quarter. NdPr, or neodymium-praseodymium, is a rare earth mix used for strong magnets.
MP Materials founder and CEO James Litinsky said the company had “record NdPr production and sales” for the quarter and pointed to progress at Independence and 10X magnetics. Adjusted EBITDA came in at $36.6 million, but net loss was still $8.0 million. MP Materials
MP stock is also caught up in a bigger policy angle. In July 2025, the company made a multibillion-dollar deal with the U.S. Defense Department. That deal would turn the government into MP’s biggest shareholder, lock in a $110-per-kilogram floor price on key rare earths, and support a new magnet plant planned to push capacity to 10,000 metric tons a year from 2028. “A game changer for the ex-China industry,” said Ryan Castilloux at Adamas Intelligence. Reuters
USA Rare Earth jumped 6.3% to $29.77 on Monday after the company said it may put over 175 million euros—about $204 million—into expanding its metals, alloys and magnet capacity in France. CEO Barbara Humpton told Reuters that “magnet making in France is a key goal.” The competition hasn’t slowed. Reuters
Energy Fuels ticked up 0.4% to $18.30. The gain was smaller than MP’s, but buying spread beyond just the biggest U.S. rare-earth name.
The trade is not without risk. MP is still losing money on a GAAP basis. Rare-earth prices are volatile, and the outlook depends partly on policy, customer deals and ramping up new magnet production. USA Rare Earth’s own France release noted that planned projects might change, get delayed or not close at all. That’s a reminder the push for Western rare-earths is more than a market play—it’s a capital-intense industry move.