Barrons Roundtable discusses the significance of uncommon earths and magnets, and China’s monopoly over the business.
A significant U.S. steelmaker is trying to assist kickstart home manufacturing of uncommon earth minerals amid China’s transfer to dam entry amid its commerce dispute with the Trump administration.
Cleveland-Cliffs, a steelmaker headquartered in Ohio, introduced the uncommon earths plan on the corporate’s quarterly earnings name on Monday.
“Beyond steelmaking, the renewed importance of rare earths has driven us to re-focus on this potential opportunity at our upstream mining assets,” stated Cleveland-Cliffs’ CEO Lourenco Goncalves on the earnings name. “It is our obligation to do so as a company with our geological footprint.”
A employee on the Cleveland Cliffs Cleveland Works metal mill facility in Cleveland, Ohio, on Oct. 21, 2024. (Dustin Franz/Bloomberg by way of Getty Pictures)
“We have looked at all of our ore bodies and tailings basins, and two sites in particular, one in Michigan and one in Minnesota, show the most potential. At these two sites, geological surveys show key indicators of rare earth mineralization,” he stated.
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Goncalves stated that the transfer aligns Cleveland-Cliffs with the Trump administration’s efforts to extend home manufacturing of uncommon earths and diversify sourcing of these key metals – that are utilized in every thing from computer systems to smartphones to cruise missiles.
“If successful, it would align Cleveland-Cliffs with the broader national strategy for critical material independence, similar to what we achieved in steel,” Goncalves stated.
Ticker Safety Final Change Change % CLF CLEVELAND-CLIFFS INC. 15.85 +2.52
+18.94%
“American manufacturing shouldn’t rely on China or any foreign nation for essential minerals, and Cliffs intends to be part of the solution,” he added.
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Chinese language President Xi Jinping and President Donald Trump are working by means of a dispute over uncommon earth minerals. (Thomas Peter-Pool / Getty Pictures)
Administration officers stated final week that President Donald Trump is ready to satisfy with Chinese language President Xi Jinping later this month to handle commerce points, together with uncommon earths.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent stated at a press convention that the U.S. does not need to escalate a commerce battle with China and stated that Trump is ready to meet with Xi in South Korea later this month.
U.S. Commerce Consultant Jamieson Greer advised FOX Enterprise’ Edward Lawrence that there’s room for a optimistic financial relationship between the U.S. and China if they’ll make commerce extra balanced.
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China is likely one of the world’s largest producers of uncommon earth minerals. (Bert van Dijk / Getty Pictures)
“To paraphrase the secretary in one of our recent meetings with the Chinese, this is the last time we want to be talking about rare earths with the Chinese,” Greer stated. “Unfortunately, that is not the last time they want to be talking about it.”
“The reality is, there are a lot of areas where we can trade with the Chinese,” he continued. “Our trade is wildly imbalanced. So it needs to be more balanced. And there is a lot of, as the secretary said, areas of risk.”
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Earlier this month, Trump threatened to impose “massive” tariffs on China after the Chinese language authorities started telling international locations all over the world that they intend to implement export controls on uncommon earths, which he stated would maintain the world “captive” by means of what he deemed a “sinister and hostile move.”
The president stated that following China’s transfer there gave the impression to be “no reason” to satisfy with Xi as a result of uncommon earth dispute.