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China's rare-earth magnet exports reached a six-month peak in July

China's rare-earth magnet exports reached a six-month peak in July

China's rare earth magnet exports have recovered and reached a six-month peak in July. This shows that trade flows for the minerals essential to electric vehicles are back to their pre-export curb levels.

The General Administration of Customs reported on Wednesday that exports of the world's biggest rare earth magnet supplier increased by nearly 75% in June, reaching the highest monthly total since January with 5,577 tons.

The volume in July, which was in line analysts' expectations was also 5.7% more than the 5,278 tonnes shipped in the same period last year.

Exports continued to recover after Beijing signed a series deals with the United States, Europe and other countries to increase shipments. The agreements also eased the export controls imposed by Beijing in April as a retaliation to U.S. Tariffs.

The slow approval process for export licenses caused a sharp decline in shipments between April and May. This disrupted global supply chains, and forced some automakers to stop production outside of China due to rare earths shortages.

Germany was the top export destination by country with 1,116 tons of goods, an increase of 46% over the previous month.

Last month, outbound shipments from China to the United States increased by 75.5% compared to the previous month. This is 4.8% more than in the same month of 2024.

The first seven months this year saw China export 27,897 tonnes of rare earth magnets, with an annual decline of 15%, down from 18,9% in the first half. Reporting by Amy Lv, Lewis Jackson and SonaliPaul; editing by Himani Sarkar & Sonali Paul

(source: Reuters)