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Yahoo
2 days ago
- Business
- Yahoo
Rare Earth Magnets Market Report 2026-2036, with Detailed Analysis of 29 Leading Companies Across the Rare Earth Magnet Value Chain
In 2025, the rare earth magnet market faces unprecedented pressures due to geopolitical tensions, supply chain disruptions, and soaring demand from emerging technologies such as electric vehicles and robotics. China's export controls have particularly impacted industries like defense and Tesla's humanoid robots, causing significant ripple effects worldwide. The U.S.'s strategic interventions, including a $400 million investment in MP Materials and Apple's $500 million recycling partnership, highlight efforts to lessen dependency on Chinese exports. The demand for rare earth magnets, valued at $19 billion, continues to grow, underscoring the necessity for alternative technologies and robust domestic supply chains. The report examines the entire supply chain, from mining to recycling, and profiles key industry players. Dublin, July 28, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The "Global Rare Earth Magnets Market 2026-2036" report has been added to offering. The rare earth magnet market stands at a critical juncture in 2025, shaped by unprecedented geopolitical tensions, supply chain disruptions, and explosive demand growth from emerging technologies. The industry's strategic importance has become paramount as governments and corporations recognize these materials as essential infrastructure for the global energy transition and technological advancement. The most significant recent development has been China's implementation of export controls on rare earth magnets beginning in April 2025, which triggered immediate supply chain disruptions across multiple industries. China's rare earth magnet exports to the United States experienced dramatic volatility, with shipments initially halted before surging 660% in June 2025 following trade negotiations. This rebound, while substantial, still leaves overall 2025 exports trailing previous year levels, demonstrating the fragility of current supply arrangements. The export restrictions particularly impacted critical applications including defense systems, electric vehicles, and emerging technologies like Tesla's Optimus humanoid robots. Ford halted production at its Chicago plant due to magnet shortages, while companies across industries depleted stockpiles while scrambling for alternative sources. Despite a temporary trade framework announced in June 2025, implementation remains problematic with companies facing ongoing uncertainty about future supply availability. The crisis has accelerated fundamental restructuring of global rare earth magnet supply chains. The U.S. Department of Defense's $400 million investment in MP Materials represents the largest government intervention in the sector, aimed at creating domestic magnet production capabilities. MP Materials has strategically halted all rare earth exports to China as of April 2025, redirecting focus toward domestic processing and magnet manufacturing at its Mountain Pass facility. Apple's $500 million partnership with MP Materials for recycling facility development exemplifies industry efforts to build resilient domestic supply chains. These initiatives reflect growing recognition that supply chain diversification requires comprehensive investment across the entire value chain, from mining through final magnet production. However, analysts warn that developing complete alternatives to Chinese capabilities will require years rather than months, given the complex separation and processing technologies involved. Market fundamentals remain exceptionally strong despite supply disruptions. Global rare earth magnet demand approaches 385,000 tonnes annually in 2025, valued at approximately $19 billion, with compound annual growth of 7.8% driven primarily by automotive electrification and renewable energy deployment. Emerging applications promise even more dramatic growth. Robotics, currently a small demand category, is forecast to become the single largest driver of neodymium-iron-boron (NdFeB) magnet consumption by 2040, driven by professional service robots in manufacturing, hospitality, and transportation. The humanoid robotics sector alone could require massive magnet quantities as production scales toward potential deployment of billions of units. Rising costs and supply uncertainty are driving intensive research into alternative magnet technologies. Cerium-based formulations are gaining attention as substitutes for dysprosium-enhanced magnets, with cerium offering advantages as a light rare earth element avoiding current export restrictions. Companies like Volkswagen's Scout Motors are exploring magnet-free motor designs, while automakers broadly investigate reduced-magnet architectures. However, these alternatives often involve performance trade-offs that limit applicability in high-performance applications. The concept of "demand destruction" through technological substitution represents a long-term market risk, but near-term demand growth from electrification continues to outpace substitution efforts. The rare earth magnet market's evolution represents a fundamental shift from commodity trading toward strategic resource management, with profound implications for global technology deployment, national security, and the pace of energy transition. Success in navigating these challenges will determine which nations and companies maintain technological leadership in the emerging clean energy economy. The Global Rare Earth Magnets Market 2026-2036 report provides the most comprehensive analysis of the rapidly evolving rare earth permanent magnet industry, delivering critical insights into market dynamics, supply chain vulnerabilities, technological innovations, and strategic opportunities across key application sectors. This authoritative 270-page plus report combines deep technical expertise with extensive market research to deliver actionable intelligence for stakeholders navigating the complex rare earth magnet ecosystem. As global demand for high-performance magnetic materials accelerates driven by electrification megatrends, renewable energy deployment, and emerging technologies including humanoid robotics, the rare earth magnet market faces unprecedented supply chain challenges and strategic realignment. With China's dominant position in production and processing creating geopolitical risks, alternative supply chain development has become a critical priority for governments and corporations worldwide. This report examines the complete rare earth magnet value chain from mining and separation through metallization, manufacturing, and recycling, providing detailed analysis of production capacity forecasts, demand projections by application segment, technological innovation pathways, and strategic recommendations for market participants. The analysis covers neodymium-iron-boron (NdFeB) and samarium-cobalt (SmCo) permanent magnet technologies across automotive, wind energy, consumer electronics, data centers, robotics, medical imaging, aerospace, marine, and industrial automation applications. Report contents include: Critical materials classification and rare earth magnet technology fundamentals Global market sizing, demand projections, and geographic distribution analysis Supply chain architecture assessment and strategic implications Regulatory environment evolution and policy framework impact Supply Chain and Value Chain Analysis Complete value chain structure from mining through magnet manufacturing Geographic production stage distribution and regional cluster development Market entry barriers, implementation challenges, and competitive dynamics 2025 export restriction impact assessment on dysprosium, terbium, and NdFeB alloys Rare Earth Mining and Production Global mining landscape with detailed regional development analysis North American, Australian, European, South American, and African project pipelines Hard rock versus ionic clay deposit comparison and processing technologies Mining economics, financial modelling, and resource discovery lifecycle analysis Processing and Separation Technologies Comprehensive processing technology comparison including hydrometallurgical and bioleaching methods Solvent extraction, chromatography, and multi-line separation system analysis Global processing capacity forecasts and geographic distribution projections Technology innovation roadmap and development priorities Magnet Manufacturing and Technology Metallization process fundamentals and global capacity control analysis NdFeB and SmCo magnet technology comparison and performance characteristics Sintered and bonded magnet manufacturing processes and innovation developments Grade classification, performance specifications, and cost structure analysis Application Market Analysis Electric vehicle and e-mobility market demand forecasts with motor technology assessment Wind energy sector analysis including turbine technology and magnet requirements Consumer electronics, data centers, and hard disk drive market dynamics Robotics and humanoid robot technology platform analysis Medical imaging, aerospace, marine, and industrial automation applications Recycling Technologies and Circular Economy Short-loop and long-loop recycling technology comparison and performance analysis Feedstock sources, pre-processing challenges, and automation integration Market barriers assessment and industry outlook through 2036 Value chain evolution and circular supply chain development Market Forecasts and Strategic Analysis Production capacity forecasts by geographic region (2026-2036) Demand projections by application segments and materials Supply-demand balance analysis and shortage risk assessment Revenue forecasts, investment opportunities, and risk assessment framework Technology innovation roadmap and competitive dynamics evolution Company Profiles and Competitive Intelligence Detailed analysis of 29 leading companies across the rare earth magnet value chain Strategic positioning, technology focus, and market development initiatives Investment activities, partnership strategies, and capacity expansion plans The report provides comprehensive profiles of 29 leading companies across the rare earth magnet value chain including: Arafura Resources Limited Australian Strategic Materials Ltd (ASM) Carester (Caremag) Cyclic Materials Energy Fuels Inc. Hastings Technology Metals Limited HyProMag Ionic Rare Earths Ionic Technologies JL Mag Lynas Rare Earths Limited MagREEsource Materials Nexus Metalysis MP Materials Corporation Neo Performance Materials Niron Magnetics and more. These profiles examine strategic positioning, technology capabilities, production capacity, market focus, and development initiatives across mining, processing, manufacturing, and recycling operations. For more information about this report visit About is the world's leading source for international market research reports and market data. We provide you with the latest data on international and regional markets, key industries, the top companies, new products and the latest trends. CONTACT: CONTACT: Laura Wood,Senior Press Manager press@ For E.S.T Office Hours Call 1-917-300-0470 For U.S./ CAN Toll Free Call 1-800-526-8630 For GMT Office Hours Call +353-1-416-8900Connectez-vous pour accéder à votre portefeuille


Forbes
18-07-2025
- Business
- Forbes
Agentic AI Is Coming For CIOs
SAP Insights explains what CIOs need to know about agentic AI and how to build a workforce strategy. Agentic AI is the next iteration of AI at work, and CIOs need to know how to incorporate it into strategies and workflow. The next SAP Insights newsletter explains how to get started. Agents for AI. Agentic AI is the AI that's able to trigger commands that automatically complete tasks, and that means work gets done sort of in the background. Software companies are starting to add it to their existing AI tools, which is to say: Agentic AI—coming soon to your workplace. If it's not there already. However, it creates some additional considerations that CIOs need to be aware of. We discuss. Also in this issue: Supply chains. There's a supply chain change happening at the moment that's steering focus away from resiliency and toward cost. Concerns about stability and the global economy have prompted this refocus. But the question is: Can you have both? We say yes. Celebrating (?) the birth of remote working. Here's who to blame for our ability to work anywhere. Apple's iBook laptop with built-in Wi-Fi was a game changer. Although Apple discontinued the colorful clamshell design after just two years, the Wi-Fi technology remains. This is the history of what we now take for granted. Research That Hasn't Reached Your Inbox. AI and employee well-being; AI and employee stress (hint: it's about control); and why using LLMs to write is kinda problematic. Want the full stories? Make sure you never miss a biweekly SAP Insights newsletter. Sign up here.
Yahoo
15-07-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
ReElement Technologies Launches Urban Mining-to-Magnet Tolling Service for 99.5%+ Separated Rare Earth Oxides
Innovative offering enables cost-effective recycling of permanent magnets into high-purity Nd, Pr, Dy, and Tb oxides at $25-$35/kg ReElement achieves over 90% recovery rates and partners with domestic magnet producers to deliver a fully circular, U.S.-based supply chain FISHERS, IN / / July 11, 2025 / American Resources Corporation (NASDAQ:AREC) ("American Resources") along with its holding in ReElement Technologies Corporation ("ReElement"), a leading U.S. innovator in rare earth element (REE) and critical mineral refining, is pleased to announce the launch of its urban mining-to-magnet rare earth supply chain. Through this offering, ReElement will provide toll processing services to separate and purify recycled rare earth magnets into high-purity Nd, NdPr, Dy, and Tb oxides - achieving purities of 99.5% or greater - for an average cost of $25 to $35 per kilogram. These refined materials will then be converted back into magnets by ReElement's domestic partners, establishing a cost-effective and fully integrated U.S.-based magnet supply chain. ReElement is also recycling a range of strategic and esoteric critical minerals - many of which are subject to China's export controls or near-monopoly - including Terbium (Tb), Gallium (Ga), Germanium (Ge), Gadolinium (Gd), Samarium (Sm), Cobalt (Co), Yttrium (Y), and others essential to both commercial and defense-related high-tech applications. Under these partnerships, ReElement accepts material for recycling and returns the separated and purified oxides - or other desired chemical compound forms - with purities ranging from 99.9% to 99.999%. These refined products are typically provided to the recycling partner at or below prevailing Chinese market prices. Mark Jensen, CEO and Chairman of ReElement, commented, "Over the past decade, we've built an innovative platform - along with the processes and partnerships - to establish an economically viable rare earth and critical mineral supply chain here in the United States. Our Indiana facilities are producing high-purity, separated, and refined Nd, NdPr, and Dy, which we've delivered to domestic partners at costs competitive with Chinese pricing. We're proud to launch this collaborative tolling service for customers committed to building stable, long-term U.S.-based supply chains. If your operations require separated and purified rare earth oxides, reach out to our team - we're ready to help reduce your dependence on inefficient and unstable global supply channels. We firmly believe there's no other group in the U.S. capable of matching our combination of technical performance and pricing in delivering high-purity, refined rare earth and critical mineral products." ReElement is feedstock-agnostic and has successfully processed magnets sourced from wind turbines, automotive rotors, power tool rotors, hard disk drives, electric motors, and magnetic separators. The company has also recycled magnetic swarf from magnet manufacturing operations, returning it to the production cycle. In the coming months, ReElement expects to announce additional tolling partnerships involving SEG, SEG+, MREC, MREO, and other ore-based feedstocks - in addition to existing antimony refining services. ReElement's refining platform - originally developed by Purdue for pharmaceutical purification - has been reengineered to separate rare earths and critical minerals with exceptional efficiency, scalability, and purity. Their patented, programmable platform handles multiple feedstocks and minerals, enabling rapid modular deployment across locations and resource types. Unlike legacy solvent extraction methods, it uses far fewer chemicals, requires less space, and generates minimal waste - making it faster to permit and simpler to co-locate near feedstock or end-use customers. This breakthrough eliminates a major chokepoint in global critical mineral supply chains, which has been dominated by single-source processing, no longer tenable as the U.S. must forge critical mineral supply chain independence, both through processing in the US and in partnership with allies abroad. About ReElement Technologies Corporation ReElement Technologies Corporation, a portfolio company of American Resources Corporation (NASDAQ:AREC), is a leading provider of high-performance refining capacity for rare earth and critical battery elements. Its multi-mineral, multi-feedstock platform technology focuses on the refining of recycled material from rare earth permanent magnets and lithium-ion batteries, concentrated ores and brines, as well as coal-based waste streams and byproducts to create a cost effective and environmentally-safe, circular supply chain. ReElement has developed its innovative and scalable "Powered by ReElement" process which collaboratively utilizes its exclusively licensed intellectual property within its partners' material processing flow sheets to more efficiently support the global supply chain's growing demand for magnet and battery-grade products. For more information visit or connect with the Company on Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn. Learn more about ReElement Technologies' process and technology here - Video. About American Resources Corporation (NASDAQ:AREC) American Resources Corporation is a leader in the critical mineral supply chain, developing innovative solutions both upstream and downstream of the refining process. The company and its affiliates focus on the extraction and processing of metallurgical carbon and iron ore, essential ingredients in steelmaking, as well as critical and rare earth minerals for the electrification market and recycled metals. Leveraging its affiliation and former parent status of ReElement Technologies Corporation, a leading provider of high-performance refining capacity for rare earth and critical battery elements, American Resources is investing in and developing efficient upstream and downstream critical mineral operations. These operations include mining interests in conventional and unconventional sources, recycling, and manufacturing. American Resources has established a nimble, low-cost business model centered on growth, which provides a significant opportunity to scale its portfolio of assets to meet the growing global infrastructure and electrification markets while also continuing to acquire operations and significantly reduce their legacy industry risks. Its streamlined and efficient operations are able to maximize margins while reducing costs. For more information visit or connect with the Company on Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn. Special Note Regarding Forward-Looking Statements This press release contains "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties, and other important factors that could cause the Company's actual results, performance, or achievements or industry results to differ materially from any future results, performance, or achievements expressed or implied by these forward-looking statements. These statements are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties, many of which are beyond American Resources Corporation's control. The words "believes", "may", "will", "should", "would", "could", "continue", "seeks", "anticipates", "plans", "expects", "intends", "estimates", or similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements, although not all forward-looking statements contain such identifying words. Any forward-looking statements included in this press release are made only as of the date of this release. The Company does not undertake any obligation to update or supplement any forward-looking statements to reflect subsequent events or circumstances. The Company cannot assure you that the projected results or events will be achieved. Investor Contact: JTC Team, LLCJenene Thomas(908) 824 - 0775arec@ Media Inquiries: Marjorie Weisskohl703-587-1532mweisskohl@ Company Contact: Mark LaVerghetta317-855-9926 ext. 0investor@ SOURCE: American Resources Corporation View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire


Reuters
08-07-2025
- Business
- Reuters
US ocean imports from China tumbled 28% in June on tariff hikes
LOS ANGELES, July 8 - U.S. imports of containerized goods from China tumbled 28.3% year-on-year in June, after higher tariffs on goods from the country's top ocean trade partner extended a steep drop that began in May, supply chain technology provider Descartes ( opens new tab said on Tuesday. Overall U.S. container imports fell 3.5% from June 2024 levels, coming in at 2.2 million 20-foot equivalent units (TEUs). China imports totaled 639,300 TEUs last month, according to Descartes' analysis of bill of lading data from U.S. customs. The retreat followed an extended run of near-record imports fueled by importers rushing in goods to beat tariff deadlines. China's share of U.S. imports hit 28.8% in June, well below the July 2024 peak of 40%. As a result, popular imports from China, from furniture and toys to textiles and footwear, tumbled last month. At the same time, imports from several Southeast Asian countries, including Vietnam, Indonesia and Thailand surged as retailers and other imports diversified sourcing. U.S. ocean imports appear to be stabilizing after the 7.2% year-on-year drop in May, said Jackson Wood, director of industry strategy at Descartes. Year-to-date, total imports through June are tracking 3.8% above 2024, though growth has slowed compared to earlier in the year, Descartes said. "This isn't as bad as it could have been or as bad as we thought it was going to be," Wood said. Still, uncertainty over U.S. tariffs is likely to persist. The U.S.-China trade truce that lowered punitive tariffs is set to expire on August 10. Trump on Monday signed an executive order extending the partial U.S. tariff rate reprieve on many countries, changing it from July 9 to August 1.


South China Morning Post
08-07-2025
- Business
- South China Morning Post
China's rare earth dominance faces global pushback but Beijing has ‘strong hand': analysts
Beijing's recent export controls on rare earths have spurred a flurry of international efforts to diversify supply chains and reduce China's long-standing dominance in critical minerals. Advertisement In June, the Ministry of Commerce announced that it would approve qualified export applications and was open to discussions with other countries regarding the restrictions. But as rare earths emerge as a new front in the US-China rivalry, companies worldwide have announced plans for a string of projects designed to break dependence on Chinese supplies. On July 2, the Australia-listed St George Mining announced in an email that it had begun identifying enriched mineral zones at its fully-owned Araxá niobium-rare earth elements project in Brazil. Two weeks earlier, US companies Kaz Resources and Cove Kaz Capital issued a statement about their partnership with Kazakhstan's national geological company to explore and hold metallurgical tests at the Akbulak rare earth project. To fund a rare earth project in southern Greenland, the Nasdaq-listed Critical Metals Corp said in June that it had secured a loan of up to US$120 million from the US Export-Import Bank. Advertisement