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MP Materials stock pops as William Blair starts coverage and rare-earth price floors hit the agenda again
14 January 2026
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MP Materials stock pops as William Blair starts coverage and rare-earth price floors hit the agenda again

New York, January 14, 2026, 14:36 EST — Regular session

  • Shares of MP Materials jumped roughly 7.5% by mid-afternoon, bouncing between $62.20 and $68.73 earlier in the session
  • A day earlier, William Blair kicked off coverage, highlighting MP’s U.S. “mine-to-magnet” footprint
  • Investors digested new G7 talks on setting rare-earth price floors and related supply strategies

Shares of MP Materials climbed roughly 7.5% Wednesday, closing at $68.63. The rare-earths miner dipped as low as $62.20 earlier in a volatile session before bouncing back.

Wall Street is zeroing in on rare-earth supply chains, where policy and pricing weigh heavily alongside production. On Tuesday, William Blair analyst Neal Dingmann kicked off coverage, dubbing MP “the only fully integrated U.S. mine-to-magnet producer.” He highlighted that MP’s U.S. presence is gaining value as governments prioritize non-China sources. William Blair

This week in Washington, the policy focus intensified. Finance ministers from the G7 discussed setting price floors for rare earths — essentially a minimum price to shield producers outside China if market prices fall too low. Germany’s finance minister Lars Klingbeil noted the benefit: “the market then knows what prices it can expect,” though he added that the specifics still need ironing out. Reuters

Australia, a major supplier to Western manufacturers, announced this week it will focus on rare earths within a A$1.2 billion critical minerals reserve. The move aims to bolster supply chains and provide allies with supply rights and offtake-style deals.

For MP, price floors are very real. A July 2025 securities filing revealed a Department of Defense partnership involving a $400 million equity injection and a 10-year NdPr price floor fixed at $110 per kilogram. This deal also includes longer-term offtake agreements connected to magnet production.

NdPr stands for neodymium-praseodymium, two rare earth elements essential for permanent magnets that turn power into motion in everything from electric motors to defense gear. A “price floor” acts as a safety net: if the market price dips below that level, the buyer compensates for the shortfall.

Investors are also eyeing Apple’s evolving customer lineup as the company moves into higher-value products. In 2025, Apple inked a $500 million deal for rare-earth magnets with MP, marking a rare direct supply-chain bet by a major tech player aiming to cut reliance on China-based sources.

That said, the trade faces risks. MP’s next move hinges on expanding downstream capacity and meeting deadlines. Prices for rare earths could stay unstable if Chinese output grows or demand slips. Plus, government price support often carries conditions — and political risks — if policy shifts.

Investors are now focused on execution and any new policy cues. The next big date is MP’s earnings report, set for Feb. 19 after the market closes.

Shan Ahmed Khan is a senior markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and macroeconomic trends. A graduate of the Lahore University of Management Sciences (LUMS), he previously worked in investment research and market analysis. His coverage helps readers understand the key developments influencing global financial markets and emerging industries.

Stock Market Today

  • Micron Falls 6.7% Amid Focus on $100 Billion Memory Contracts and Price-Driven Gains
    June 28, 2026, 1:09 PM EDT. Micron Technology (NASDAQ:MU) shares dropped 6.69% to $1,132.33 on heavy volume after hitting a 52-week high earlier in the week. The stock trades at 9.1 times annualized fiscal Q4 earnings per share guidance, with remaining performance obligations from strategic memory contracts totaling around $100 billion-just 7.7% of its $1.28 trillion market cap. The semiconductor sector decline and investor caution highlight uncertainty over how much of Micron's future earnings are priced in. Fiscal Q3 revenue surged to $41.46 billion, driven primarily by sharp price increases in DRAM and NAND memory products rather than shipment growth. CFO Mark Murphy noted contracts cover minimum revenue commitments, leaving upside potential if prices hold. The market will closely watch whether these contracts stabilize Micron's traditionally cyclical business.

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