The Trump administration’s wants to expand price support mechanisms for U.S. rare earths projects, according to new Reuters report.
It’s a calculated response to a confluence of geopolitics, supply chain risk, and the urgent need to secure global supply chains by breaking China’s chokehold on critical mineral prices.
1. Price Floor Shock: From MP Materials to the Whole Sector
On July 24, White House officials led by Peter Navarro and David Copley convened a rare earths summit with industry heavyweights and tech titans—Apple, Microsoft, Corning—whose supply chains depend on these strategic metals. The message: the price floor deal struck with MP Materials, the only U.S. rare earth miner, is “not a one-off.” Instead, similar guarantees are in the works for other domestic producers and refiners, aiming to de-risk investment and accelerate a homegrown supply chain.
This follows the Pentagon’s unprecedented $400 million equity stake in MP Materials, which locked in a $110/kg price floor for neodymium-praseodymium oxide and guaranteed a decade of government purchases. The result? MP shares rocketed over 50% in a day, and the company’s market cap leapt by billions as investors raced to price in government-backed revenue streams. Apple quickly followed with a $500 million supply contract, sending sector sentiment into overdrive.
2. Supply Chain Squeeze: China’s Export Halt and U.S. Response
The catalyst for this policy blitz? China’s March export halt on rare earths, which exposed the fragility of Western supply chains and sent shockwaves through tech and defense industries. With Beijing controlling 55% of global mining and 85% of refining capacity, the U.S. recognized its vulnerability—and moved to replicate the urgency of Operation Warp Speed, but for minerals instead of vaccines.
Navarro’s pitch: “move in ‘Trump Time,’” pushing U.S. mining, processing, recycling, and magnet production as fast as possible. Tech firms were encouraged to invest directly or acquire stakes in rare earths ventures, signaling a public-private push to incubate a full-spectrum domestic industry.
3. Structural Demand: Defense, Tech, and the Electrification Boom
Rare earths aren’t just a national security play—they’re the backbone of the green and digital revolutions. Magnets made from these metals power everything from F-35 fighter jets and Tomahawk missiles to EV motors and AI data centers. With the Pentagon agreeing to buy 100% of MP’s output for 10 years, and private lenders like JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs providing over $1 billion in financing, the signal to the market is clear: demand is real, and the U.S. is betting big on supply.
4. Policy Volatility: Tariffs, Tax Breaks, and Export Ban Talk
The administration isn’t stopping at price floors. Billions in incentives from Trump’s new tax and spending bill are on the table, and officials are considering further trade and export restrictions to spur domestic recycling—though not before U.S. industry is ready to withstand Chinese retaliation. As Navarro put it: “All policy options are on the table. As President Trump loves to say, ‘Let’s see what happens.’”
5. Outlook: High Volatility, High Stakes
The rare earths surge is no flash rally. With government guarantees, sector-wide price floors, and strategic offtake agreements, the U.S. is rewriting the rulebook for commodity markets. Expect volatility as new deals roll out and as policymakers weigh tariffs, export bans, and further incentives. But unless supply chains expand dramatically, structural demand from defense and clean tech ensures rare earths will remain at the center of geopolitical and market attention through 2025 and beyond.
Takeaway: The rare earths market is the new battleground for industrial policy, national security, and technological supremacy. With Washington’s intervention, expect elevated prices, fierce competition for supply, and a new era of state-backed resource strategy.

