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China hints at rare earth export curbs in US trade war

  • Spanish Market: Metals
  • 29/05/19

The Chinese government has given the strongest hint yet that it may restrict exports of rare earths to the US as part of the trade war between the countries.

China will continue to keep most of its rare earth resources for domestic use, while meeting "reasonable demand" from other countries, top planning body the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) said.

But "the Chinese people will never accept the US using the products made by China's exported rare earths to counter and suppress China's development," the NDRC said.

The NDRC statement was echoed by a commentary in the state-run People's Daily newspaper today, which referred to China's dominant role in global rare earths supplies and noted that US production of consumer electronics and military equipment is "highly dependent" on Chinese rare earths.

"Will rare earths become a counter weapon for China to hit back against US pressure…? The answer is no mystery," the commentary said.

"We advise the US side not to underestimate the Chinese side's ability to safeguard its development rights and interests. Don't say we didn't warn you!"

The People's Daily commentary was not attributed directly to the government, but is highly unlikely to have been published without official backing.

China exported 53,000t of rare earths last year, around 45pc of its total production of about 120,000t. China accounts for more than 90pc of global supplies of rare earths, while 70-80pc of all US imports of rare earth oxides and metals come from China.

The Chinese government has yet to make clear whether it will restrict rare earth exports to the US. The commerce ministry said last week that China has not implemented any extra trade management measures on rare earths in addition to the regular export licence system.

The China-US trade dispute has escalated in the last few weeks. The US raised its tariffs on $200bn/yr of Chinese imports to 25pc from 10pc on 10 May, with bismuth and several electronic metals affected. But rare earths and critical minerals are among the few products that the US has excluded from potential tariffs on almost all remaining imports from China, reflecting China's dominant role in the global market.

Beijing retaliated against the latest US measures on 13 May by imposing 5-25pc tariffs on imports of hundreds of metals, ores and ferro-alloys from the US, effective 1 June.

The list covers imports of rare earth ores and concentrates, oxides of several elements such as yttrium, praseodymium, terbium and mixed rare earth carbonates from the US. The biggest impact will be on companies that have invested in rare earth mines in the US, as the tariffs will make it less viable to process the material in China.

Any move by Beijing to restrict rare earths exports would be likely to benefit China's domestic magnetic material manufacturers. The US lacks medium and heavy rare earths such as terbium and dysprosium, which are critical to manufacturing high-end magnetic materials, although it is self-sufficient in light rare earths. China exported 4,100t of rare earth magnetic materials to the US last year.

Rare earths prices have risen in the past week in anticipation of stronger demand from the magnetic material sector because of potentially supportive government policies, after Chinese president Xi Jinping's visit to domestic producer JL Mag Rare-Earth on 20 May sparked speculation that rare earths could be dragged into the trade war.

A fall in ore supply from Myanmar (Burma) following a ban on imports that took effect on 15 May is also lifting prices, particularly for medium and heavy rare earths.


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15/01/25

US inflation gains, core prices ease in December

US inflation gains, core prices ease in December

Houston, 15 January (Argus) — Headline inflation quickened to an annualized 2.9pc in December from a year earlier but core inflation slowed for the first time since August. The acceleration in the consumer price index (CPI) last month compared with 2.7pc in November, according to the Labor Department. Analysts surveyed by Trading Economics had forecast gains of 2.9pc. Core inflation, which excludes volatile food and energy, slowed to an annual 3.2pc from 3.3pc the prior month. It came in under analysts' forecasts of 3.3pc. Traders raised the probability the Federal Reserve will cut its target rate at the June meeting to about 66pc odds from about 58pc Tuesday, according to CME's FedWatch tool. The Fed in December penciled in two likely quarter-point cuts this year but strong job growth and signs of inflation reigniting have been pushing any likely move back later into the year. The energy index contracted by an annual 0.5pc in December, compared with a 3.2pc decline in November. The gasoline index fell by 3.4pc last month compared with an 8.1pc decline the prior month. Energy services rose by 3.3pc following a 2.8pc gain in November. Services less energy services, considered a core services measure, rose by an annual 4.4pc in December after a 4.6pc gain the prior month. Shelter costs rose by an annual 4.6pc following an annual 4.7pc gain the month prior. Food rose by 2.5pc after a 2.7pc gain. Transportation services rose by an annual 7.3pc in December. For the month, the CPI rose by 0.4pc following a 0.3pc gain in November that followed four months of 0.2pc gains. Energy rose by 2.6pc in December from the prior month, accounting for 40pc of the monthly headline gain, after rising by 0.2pc in November. Core inflation slowed to a monthly 0.2pc gain after four months of 0.3pc gains. By Bob Willis Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

N.EU HRC forward curve flattens


15/01/25
15/01/25

N.EU HRC forward curve flattens

London, 15 January (Argus) — The north European hot-rolled coil (HRC) forward curve has flattened considerably of late, lessening the strong contango of recent months. March traded at €620/t today on the CME Group's north European contract, and June at a slight premium of €623/t. On screen, April also traded at €623/t. Some derivatives participants expressed surprise at the narrow range, as they thought the curve would be firmer on the back of impending import constraints: the European Commission is currently conducting a functional review of its steel safeguard, which was requested by Eurofer and member states. Mills' firmer spot stance is seemingly generating some small restocking at present. Several service centres have reported brisker activity in the past few days, and traders suggest enquiries are also increasing, although it is hard to make imports work at present. The market leader is still offering officially at €630/t base, and has made sales close to €600/t, and higher in some regions. Most other offers are €600/t and above, although one producer is still offering close to €580/t, according to buyers. The curve is still at a fairly strong contango compared with spot prices, with Argus ' underlying northwest EU HRC index averaging €564.50/t so far this month — the index was at €573/t on Tuesday, up by €14.70/t since the start of the month. Over the same period mill margins have widened slightly more, with raw material costs also decelerating. The HRC index was at a €78.89/t premium to Argus ' daily blast furnace-basic oxygen furnace opex cost marker on Tuesday, up from €60.65/t on 2 January. Other participants question the strength of underlying demand, and suggest this is driving the flat curve. Data from the IFO Institute show overall German manufacturing inventory rose to its highest level in over a decade in December, while new orders contracted at the fastest rate since the depths of the Covid-19 pandemic in June 2020. The German economy contracted last year amid high energy costs and difficulties competing in export markets. By Colin Richardson Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Cliffs still seeks US Steel, pledges no closures


13/01/25
13/01/25

Cliffs still seeks US Steel, pledges no closures

Houston, 13 January (Argus) — Cleveland-Cliffs chief executive Lourenco Goncalves said today that he remains open to buying US Steel, promising to keep all of the acquired assets open. Goncalves said Ohio-based Cliffs still wants to buy Pennsylvania-based US Steel and would invest in the company's assets. "Of course, we are going to keep [US Steel mills] open," Goncalves told reporters on Monday. "We are going to make them bigger, we are going to make them better, we are going to produce more." His comments come 10 days after President Joe Biden blocked Japan-based Nippon Steel's agreement to buy US Steel for $15bn, citing national security concerns. Nippon had committed to invest $1.3bn in US Steel's mills and to not cut any of US Steel's production for 10 years without government approval. Cliffs tried to buy US Steel for $54/share with half paid in cash and half in company stock before US Steel agreed to go with Nippon's $55/share all-cash offer. Goncalves promise to not close any acquired assets comes as the US steel market remains oversupplied , according to market sources. Goncalves said he cannot make a bid for US Steel until the company and Nippon cancel their merger agreement. He also dismissed antitrust concerns over Cliffs owning all US iron ore mines and all US blast furnace capacity. A combined company would have Cliffs running the mining side of the business and US Steel running the steelmaking operations, he said. A US Steel-Cliffs merger would have 32.1mn short tons (st)/yr of flat rolled raw steel capacity, in addition to plate making and seamless tube production. Goncalves did not say how he would finance such a purchase. Cliffs had $3.8bn in liquidity as of 30 September, including $39mn of cash, according to a third-quarter presentation. US Steel had $4.05bn in liquidity in the same period, of which $1.77bn was cash. Nippon is trying to buy US Steel. Both companies have sued Biden and others in the government over the denial, and filed a separate lawsuit against Cliffs, Goncalves and United Steelworkers (USW) International president David McCall, who endorsed a takeover by Cliffs. By Rye Druzchetta Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Mexico’s industrial output up 0.1pc in November


13/01/25
13/01/25

Mexico’s industrial output up 0.1pc in November

Mexico City, 13 January (Argus) — Mexico's industrial production edged up 0.1pc in November, as gains in autos and other manufacturing offset weaker construction, national statistics agency Inegi said. Mexican bank Banorte described the monthly increase as "rather small," noting it followed a 1.1pc decline in October and was largely driven by base comparison effects. The bank added that the overall industrial outlook remained "fragile." Manufacturing, which represents 63pc of Inegi's seasonally adjusted industrial activity indicator (IMAI), increased by 0.7pc in November, though it failed to fully recover from a 1.7pc drop in October. Transportation manufacturing, a key subsector accounting for 12pc of the sector, rose by 3.8pc after a steep 4.3pc decline the prior month. Despite recent volatility, Mexico's auto sector achieved record annual light vehicle production in 2024, reaching 3.99mn units. Yet, automaker association AMIA warned of potential challenges in 2025 because of economic uncertainty, which could affect investment and demand. Mining, which makes up 12pc of the IMAI, increased by 0.1pc in November following a 1.1pc decline in October. Growth was driven by a 41.4pc jump in mining-related services, while oil and gas output fell by 2.4pc, marking a fifth consecutive monthly decline for hydrocarbons. Construction, representing 19pc of the IMAI, contracted by 1.8pc in November after modest gains of 0.2pc in October and 1.1pc in September. As industry eyes potential policy shifts under US president-elect Donald Trump, Banorte projected a weak start to 2025 for Mexico's industrial output. But it expects momentum to build as government spending on priority infrastructure projects "moves more decisively." By James Young Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Lithium prices unlikely to recover in 2025


13/01/25
13/01/25

Lithium prices unlikely to recover in 2025

London, 13 January (Argus) — Prices for lithium carbonate equivalent (LCE) are unlikely to recover this year, according to market participants, owing to high inventories and Chinese overcapacity. While the vast majority of firms have either suspended or trimmed production at costs above Argus -assessed prices (see graph) , a number of other factors have weighed on price rises, including redundant Chinese lithium refining capacity, inventories of low and mid-grade concentrate and end-of-life LFP batteries. Chinese lepidolite, African low-grade ores and Brazilian tailings are "not immune" to low prices, according to supply chain consultantcy SC Insights. Prices are currently far below highs of $80,000/t in late 2022, although not at record lows by historical standards. "We have put our lithium plant in Zimbabwe on ice for now, margins are just too tight," a southern Africa-based producer said. The market could start to recover in the second half of 2026 as carmakers turn increasingly towards lower-cost lithium iron phosphate (LFP) batteries, SC Insights said. Between 2025 and 2026, major carmakers will start "socialising the intensions of using more LFP and LFMP [lithium iron manganese phosphate]", with it especially vital that LFMP producers "react early and offer a cost-competitive solution in CAM/LIB [cathode active material/lithium-ion battery] spaces". SC Insights forecasts that global annual LCE production will tip over 2.5mn t of LCE by 2030 (see graph) , from just over 1mn t last year, based on the adoption of these newer battery chemistries. Buildout of this supply will depend, SC Insights said, on the proposed restriction of CAM/LIB technology by China. The buildout of Argentinian lithium production could be a key factor in 2025, according to SC Insights, after global mining giant Rio Tinto announced last October that it would buy Arcadium Lithium. Argentinian president Javier Milei and Rio Tinto held a meeting in December 2024 and although it is unclear what the results of that meeting were, the relationship between Rio Tinto and the Argentinian government could be important for the lithium market this year. Argentina holds the third-largest reserves of lithium at 3.6mn t behind Chile and Australia, and the second-largest pool of resources at 23mn t, behind Bolivia, according to the US Geological Survey in January. By Chris Welch Cost of production, lithium carbonate equivalent (LCE) Lithium carbonate equivalent (LCE) production t Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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