📌 Key Takeaways
- U.S. officials now expect People’s Republic of China to delay planned export controls on rare earths after two-day talks in Kuala Lumpur, signalling renewed scope for a trade deal.
- China still dominates the rare-earths industry: it accounted for ~270 000 t of production in 2024 vs. ~45 000 t in the U.S.
- For investors and governments the deal raises three questions: Will export controls vanish, can U.S. and allies scale alternative supply chains, and how does China monetise leverage over critical minerals?
During recent high-level talks, U.S. officials interpreted Chinese cooperation as an opportunity to avert export restrictions that would hit electronics, EVs, military systems and other downstream sectors. After negotiations, the U.S. side said China is likely to delay the November 8 implementation of its new export-licensing regime for rare earths.
Talking to ABC, US Treasury Secretary said “On China’s threat to impose export controls on valuable rare earth minerals, Bessent said he believes “they are going to delay that for a year while they reexamine it.”
China’s reluctance to immediately impose the controls reflects two pressures:
- A desire to avoid a full scale supply shock in global value chains in the run-up to the planned meeting between Donald Trump and Xi Jinping.
- The recognition that the optics of cutting off rare earth flows would accelerate diversification efforts by the West.
The tentative framework for a US-China trade deal also involves soybeans and TikTok.
China’s dominance – and why it matters
China’s position in the rare-earth ecosystem is formidable: according to the United States Geological Survey (USGS), U.S. rare-earth mine output in 2024 was ~45 000 t REO equivalent, while China’s output runs in the hundreds of thousands of tonnes.
Processing is where the real bottleneck lies: China’s share of global refined rare-earth compounds at ~94 %. And, since the new export restrictions by China, automakers, aerospace and tech firms have been “scouring” the market for supply:
- Manufacturers of magnets, EV motors, wind turbines, radar systems are globally reliant on China’s output and processing.
- Even if raw mining is diversified, processing and alloys remain dominated by China — making “downstream value-capture” outside China expensive and time-taking.
- Regulatory shock events (export controls, licensing, quotas) are high-impact given the concentration risk.
What’s at stake in the potential deal?
Relief for markets
If China backs off its export-controls timetable, then supply-chain stress may ease. That can push down risk premiums for juniors looking to build capacity outside China.
Leverage retained
Even if China delays, it retains leverage. The pipeline of new licensing rules and upstream production quotas means the threat of disruption remains alive — brown-storm scenario.
Opportunity for supply-chain reset
A deal could provide cover for Western governments (U.S., EU, Australia) to accelerate investment in non-Chinese supply chains. But scaling mining → separation → alloy → magnet remains a multiyear project.
Risks for investors and policymakers
- False calm: A delay in controls isn’t a resolution. China could still pull the trigger later; investors in non-Chinese supply chains must assume ongoing geopolitical risk.
- Structural lag: Even if U.S. policy or corporate investments ramp, it takes years to build credible processing capacity. Early moving companies are exposed to cost overruns and permitting risk.
- Commodity pricing: Lower risk premium could reduce spot pricing for rare earths temporarily — which may hurt near-term juniors. Longer term, when supply tightens, pricing upside remains.
Conclusion
A tentative U.S.–China deal on rare earths can ease immediate supply-chain fears — but it doesn’t solve the structural dependency. China has shown it is willing to temporarily de-escalate, yet retains control through refining dominance and future licensing. For investors and policymakers, the game is now about building credible alternatives, positioning for the next disruption and distinguishing between short-term relief and long-term transformation. Developments in the next 12–18 months will determine whether this is merely a pause or a true turning point for critical mineral supply chains.

