China ramps up rare earth exports after fright for global buyers
China's rare earth product exports, including magnets, rebounded in July, reaching their highest level since January. This recovery follows earlier concerns about potential supply disruptions due to trade tensions with the US. Despite initial expo...

Shipments jumped last month to reach their highest since January, well before China leveraged its dominance of rare earths to hit back at Trump’s punitive tariffs. Beijing agreed to resume flows to the US as part of a trade truce with Washington.
Data released Monday covers rare earth products, a category typically dominated by so-called permanent magnets. Volumes sold overseas rose 69% to 6,422 tons in July, according to Bloomberg News calculations.

Exports from China reached a low in May after China launched the curbs, which covered shipments of seven rare earths as well as products made from them. US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer said earlier this month that China was “about halfway there” in terms of returning magnet supplies to where they were prior to the controls.
China’s weaponization of rare earths didn’t just affect the US, and the slump in supplies also contributed to growing tensions between the European Union and China. More granular data on exports of magnets, and the countries to which they were shipped, should be released on Wednesday.
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