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Rare Earths prices rise above the MP Materials price floor

Prices for two rare earths that are crucial to making super-strong magnets used in EVs or defence equipment have risen on the back of a?firm supply and a?firm demand. This is above an unprecedented price floor set by the U.S.

As long as the price of MP Materials' neodymium & praseodymium remains above $110 per kilogram, the U.S. Government will not be required to subsidise the company.

The price increase to $123 per kg, which is the highest level since July 2022 will also help other rare earth companies that Western governments are hoping will be able reduce their reliance on China, as it is currently the largest producer.

China is the dominant supplier of rare earths in the world, with 90% of its refining capacity and 70% of its mined output.

The price rally has been driven primarily by the strong downstream magnet demand in China and deliberate supply management.

She warned that the price increases are only temporary and that a correction downward is expected by the end March.

NdPr oxide: Chinese price The benchmark price, which is 850,000 yuan or $123 per kilogram, has increased from $63 per kilogram on July 9 when MP Materials announced its multi-billion dollar deal with the U.S.

Oversupply has pushed down NdPr's prices in recent years. In March of last year, they fell to 345,000 Yuan, their lowest level since November 2020.

Mukherjee said that while many operations could sustain production at today's high prices, current market tightness was a?short-term phenomenon and did not reflect the underlying fundamentals of the market.

In a 'ground-breaking agreement' with MP, the Pentagon offered MP a price support of $110 per kilogram for its NdPr production to help it better compete against China.

According to Adamas, the U.S. government stipulated that the company must stop shipments to China once the material has fed between 7% and 9% of China's NdPr production in the previous three years.

Analysts attributed the cutoff in supply to a tightening of the supply in China, due to lower quotas for rare earth mining and melting. However, the Chinese government has not made a public announcement about these quotas.

(source: Reuters)