Các tác nhân AI nghĩ gì về tin tức này
Tim Johnston, REalloys' medgrunnlegger, anslår tidslinjen for å ta igjen til tre til syv år for en troverdig konkurrent som starter i dag.
Rủi ro: Forsinket DoD-kvalifisering og kontantforbrenning før inntekt
Cơ hội: Potensiell "suveren premium"-prising og statlig støttet bunnpri
In 1992, China’s political leader Deng Xiaoping made a comparison that should’ve set off alarms across the West: “There is oil in the Middle East; there is rare earth in China.”
Instead, for the next 30 years, Western governments largely treated rare earth processing as low-value work — something they could hand off to whoever would do it cheapest. But then REalloys (NASDAQ: ALOY) came along with partners and started building domestic processing capability while most of the industry was still looking the other way.
Beijing saw the value in rare earths early and treated it as a long-term weapon, which is why China now controls roughly 90% of global rare earth processing.
That covers not just mining, but the refining and metal-making that turn raw rock into parts for everything from fighter jets to wind turbines.
It spent 30 years building that position deliberately, with state-backed financing, predatory pricing, and export controls designed to prevent anyone else from catching up.
And the approach has paid off. When Beijing threatened to cut off processed rare earths during tariff talks last year, the Trump administration reversed course within days. It’s no surprise, given that China controls the supply of materials our military can’t function without.
While the rare earth shortage has started making headlines over the last year or so, REalloys saw this coming years ago. While the rest of the industry was still reacting to China pulling the strings, REalloys and partners were already building — quietly, methodically, and entirely outside of China’s reach.
Now in March, the company announced it’s fully financed to build the largest heavy rare earth metallization facility outside China, after its recently completed $50 million public offering.
The roughly $40 million facility will produce about 30 tonnes of dysprosium and 15 tonnes of terbium metal per year. These are the heavy rare earths that keep magnets working inside jet engines, missile guidance systems, and advanced drone platforms where failure is not an option.
But to understand why this is so critical in today’s rare earth shortage, you have to understand how Beijing set the trap years ago.
How China Built the Most Effective Trade Weapon on Earth
China did not simply stumble into its monopoly on rare earth processing. It was a three-decade strategy, executed with patience and precision while the West gave away its processing capabilities and barely looked back.
A bipartisan Congressional probe released in November 2025 laid out the playbook in detail.
Beijing hands “tens of billions of dollars, including zero-interest-rate loans” to state mining firms. It built a legal framework for controlling mineral prices. And whenever the West started to invest, China flooded global markets to crush it.
Committee Chairman John Moolenaar put it bluntly: “From cell phones to fighter jets, every American is dependent on minerals that China manipulates for its own selfish interests. As we saw last month with its rule on rare earths, China has a loaded gun that is pointed at our economy, and we must act quickly.”
The consequences have already shown up on factory floors. When Beijing tightened export approvals in 2025, Ford had to idle its Chicago Explorer line because it couldn’t get the rare earth magnets for basic vehicle parts.
The implications extend deep into the modern defense-tech stack. Firms like Palantir Technologies (NASDAQ: PLTR) are increasingly embedded in battlefield intelligence and logistics systems that depend on hardware built with rare earth inputs—meaning supply disruptions don’t just affect manufacturing, but the digital backbone of modern warfare itself.
That was a civilian automaker with some buffer. Defense supply chains run even tighter, with longer lead times and far less room to adjust. It’s not just heavy defense either. Companies such as Axon Enterprise (NASDAQ: AXON)—best known for its TASER systems and connected law enforcement platforms—rely on advanced electronics and components that ultimately trace back to the same constrained rare earth supply chain, tying everyday security infrastructure to the same geopolitical risks. And with the latest conflicts across the Middle East and beyond, the consequences are becoming more dire by the day.
What REalloys Built While The West Watched
Most of the rare earth industry spent years reacting as China pulled the strings. REalloys (NASDAQ: ALOY), on the other hand, was doing something different: building.
The company’s operations in Euclid, Ohio, grew out of years of work with the U.S. Department of Energy and Department of Defense. While other players chased mining permits, REalloys focused on the harder problem: building the metal-making and alloying capabilities that turn processed rare earths into defense-grade inputs.
That meant working with suppliers, developing processing technology, training metallurgists, and qualifying output to military specs. That kind of work takes years, even when you know what you’re doing.
On the processing side, REalloys locked in an exclusive offtake covering 80% of the output from North America’s only heavy rare earth processing plant.
That facility is run by the Saskatchewan Research Council, which spent over 12 years working with rare earth clients at pilot and lab scale before breaking ground.
In 2020, Beijing passed export controls that blocked sales of rare earth processing technology to countries it didn’t consider allies. That should have killed the project.
Instead, the team built custom furnaces, automation systems, and separation chemistry from core physics and chemistry — requiring no Chinese technology transfer at any step.
What came out of that constraint surprised even the engineers. Because the team built the processing side from scratch rather than copying Chinese designs, the facility now runs on AI-driven controls that handle thousands of adjustments around the clock.
A comparable Chinese facility employs dozens of workers managing manual processes across an eight-hour shift. REalloys’ supply chain produces metals at higher purity with a fraction of the labor.
The Saskatchewan government funded it, construction began over five years ago, and REalloys’ exclusive agreement means the bulk of everything that plant produces flows to Ohio, where it becomes the finished alloys that defense contractors need.
Every step takes place on North American soil, with no Chinese technology, chemicals, or capital involved in any critical part of the chain.
Why Catching Up From Here Could Take Years, Not Months
The gap between REalloys and the rest of the Western world is wider than most people realize. And it’s not simply a matter of money.
Mining rare earths and processing them are completely different skills. The companies making headlines in this space are mostly miners. They know how to pull ore out of the ground.
But turning that ore into defense-grade metals requires dozens of chemical steps, each with hundreds of stages needing tight control. You can buy the best mining rights on the planet and still have no way to turn the rocks into something the Pentagon can use.
Some companies bought processing gear from China before the export controls hit. But even with the hardware, many still can’t run it properly because they bought equipment without the know-how to operate it.
The dependency on China goes deeper than just a lack of skills, though.
Chinese-made furnaces need graphite parts sourced only from Chinese makers, and those parts can wear out several times a week.
If your plant runs on Chinese hardware, you’re one supply cut away from going dark — no matter how much domestic ore you have sitting in a warehouse.
Tim Johnston, REalloys’ co-founder, puts the catch-up timeline at three to seven years for a credible competitor starting today.
That means building separation capabilities, developing oxide-to-metal conversion, qualifying with defense buyers, and doing all of it without Chinese technology or parts. REalloys (NASDAQ: ALOY) and their suppliers started that work more than a decade ago.
The Deadline That Changes the Math
All of this matters more now because of the regulatory clock that is about to run out.
On January 1, 2027, updated DFARS rules take effect, banning Chinese-origin rare earth materials from American weapons systems. The ban covers every stage: mining, refining, separation, melting, and fabrication.
Earlier loopholes let contractors melt Chinese oxides in a third country and call the output non-Chinese, but that workaround ends in 2027. The Pentagon is backing the rule with compliance checks on every covered contract, random spot-checks, and False Claims Act liability.
That means every company selling into the defense base will need a verified, non-Chinese source for rare earth metals and magnets. Meanwhile, defense innovators like AeroVironment (NASDAQ:AVAV) —a key supplier of unmanned systems used in modern conflicts—are operating at the sharp edge of this dependency, where access to high-performance materials directly determines production capacity, deployment timelines, and battlefield effectiveness.
Meanwhile, China’s own factories now use roughly 60% of their rare earth output for domestic EVs, wind turbines, and electronics.
Whatever surplus gets exported then moves through monthly licensing that Beijing adjusts depending on the political temperature. The IEA has flagged this as a core vulnerability for any country that depends on Chinese supply.
New Heavy Rare Earth Facility
REalloys’ recent announcement fills in the last piece of the puzzle. The company will use roughly $40 million from its recent offering to build the Heavy Rare Earth Metal Facility — delivering materials first assembled and tested in Saskatoon, then moved to REalloys’ Ohio operations.
From there, it’ll be available to serve U.S. defense customers and supply Defense Logistics Agency stockpiles. First operations are aiming for early-to-mid 2027, with full commercial scale expected by mid-to-late 2027.
REalloys expects to receive roughly 400 tonnes of defense-grade rare earth metals per year once the processing facility reaches full production, scaling to about 600 tonnes by 2028-29.
Washington has signaled their confidence in REalloys’ capabilities too: the U.S. EXIM Bank issued a $200 million letter of intent to support the company’s broader supply chain development
That’s in addition to their contract worth up to $1.7 million announced by the Department of Defense to fund the design of a processing facility to produce metals for weapons and electronics.
Now, as the company approaches Phase 2, it plans to target an annual output of about 18,000 tonnes of heavy rare earth permanent magnets.
As the West finally faces the consequences of relying on China for these critical resources, strategic moves like those by REalloys may help America close the gap.
Here’s the honest picture: China will still process the bulk of the world’s rare earths for years to come. The goal was never to take half the market from Beijing. After three decades of state-backed dominance, that isn’t realistic on such a short timeline.
The goal is to lock in enough non-Chinese capacity to keep the Western defense base running on its own and give the U.S. real leverage where it has none today. REalloys is one of a small number of companies working with the U.S. government to achieve this goal.
That required someone to start building before the rare earths crisis made it obvious, and to keep building through every cycle where Chinese pricing threatened it.
REalloys appeared to see this crisis coming years ago. With their recent funding news, the path from plan to production is fully paid for — and the 2027 deadline is now less than ten months away.
By. Charles Kennedy
The AI boom is triggering an unexpected and unprecedented bull run in natural gas and power stocks. If you aren't paying attention to the energy demands of data centers, you will miss the biggest energy story of the decade. The smart money is already quietly moving into the few companies prepared to power the trillion-dollar AI machine.
Oilprice Intelligence brings you the inside view on where the next gains will come from, breaking down the market's biggest growth driver with analysis from veteran oilmen and experts. Click here to get this crucial intel for free
FORWARD LOOKING STATEMENTS
This publication contains forward-looking statements, including statements regarding expected continual growth of the featured companies and/or industry. The Publisher notes that statements contained herein that look forward in time, which include everything other than historical information, involve risks and uncertainties that may affect the companies’ actual results of operations. Factors that could cause actual results to differ include, but are not limited to, changing governmental laws and policies concerning, among other things, recreational and medical cannabis sales, success of the company’s proprietary technology, the size and growth of the market for the company’s products and services, the company’s ability to fund its capital requirements in the near term and long term, pricing pressures, etc.
IMPORTANT NOTICE AND DISCLAIMER
Neither the author nor the publisher, Oilprice.com, was paid to publish this communication concerning REalloys (NASDAQ: ALOY). The owner of Oilprice.com owns shares and/or stock options of the featured company and therefore has an incentive to see the featured company’s stock perform well. The owner of Oilprice.com may buy or sell shares of the featured company at any time including at or near the time you receive this communication. This share ownership should be viewed as a major conflict with our ability to be unbiased. This is why we stress that you conduct extensive due diligence as well as seek the advice of your financial advisor or a registered broker-dealer before investing in any securities.
This communication is not, and should not be construed to be, an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to buy any security. Neither this communication nor the Publisher purport to provide a complete analysis of any company or its financial position. The Publisher is not, and does not purport to be, a broker-dealer or registered investment adviser. This communication is not, and should not be construed to be, personalized investment advice directed to or appropriate for any particular investor. Any investment should be made only after consulting a professional investment advisor and only after reviewing the financial statements and other pertinent corporate information about the company. Further, readers are advised to read and carefully consider the Risk Factors identified and discussed in the advertised company’s SEC, SEDAR and/or other government filings. Investing in securities is speculative and carries a
Thảo luận AI
Bốn mô hình AI hàng đầu thảo luận bài viết này
"2027 DFARS-fristen skaper et tvunget marked for innenlandske sjeldne jordarter, men ALOY-verdsettelsen ignorerer sannsynligvis risikoen for tekniske og operasjonelle forsinkelser."
Narrativet rundt REalloys (ALOY) er et klassisk "suverent sikkerhet"-spill, som utnytter 2027 DFARS-etterlevelsesfristen. Selv om den strategiske nødvendigheten av innenlandsk behandling av tunge sjeldne jordarter er ubestridelig, bør investorer være varsomme med den utførelsesrisikoen som er iboende i å skalere tilpasset, ikke-kinesisk teknologi. Selskapets $40 millioner anleggbudsjett virker slankt for et anlegg for produksjon av høy renhet metallurgi, og avhengigheten av en eksklusiv offtake fra en enkelt Saskatchewan-kilde skaper et enkelt feilpunkt. Hvis anlegget møter tekniske igangksettingsforsinkelser – vanlig i kjemisk prosessering – kan 2027-produksjonsmålet gli, og etterlate selskapet med brennende kontanter mens forsvarskontraktører kjemper for kompatible, men potensielt mer modne alternativer.
"Førstemann til mølla"-fordelen i ikke-kinesisk prosessering kan bli nøytralisert hvis forsvarskontraktører rett og slett skaffer seg unntak eller hvis Kina flommer markedet med billigere, ikke-kinesisk merkede materialer gjennom mellomledd for å omgå 2027-reglene.
"ALOY's tiår lange bygging og North American-kjede posisjonerer det som det laveste risikospillet for 2027 DFARS-fristen, og potensielt fanger 5-10 % av USAs etterspørsel etter tunge RE-metaller."
Kinas 90 % kontroll over behandlingen av sjeldne jordarter og 1. januar 2027 DFARS-forbudet mot kinesiske materialer i USAs forsvarsystemer skaper en hard frist for innenlandske alternativer, og validerer REalloys' (ALOY) fokus på metallisering av tunge sjeldne jordarter. Deres 50 millioner dollar-opphenting finansierer et 40 millioner dollar Ohio-anlegg som har som mål å produsere 30t dysprosium og 15t terbium årlig – kritisk for høy temperatur magneter i jetfly/missiler – med eksklusiv offtake fra Saskatchewan's China-free anlegg og DoD/EXIM-støtte. Dette reduserer risikoen for forsyning for forsvarsprimer. Men ALOY's mikrokapitalstatus ($XXM mkt cap etter opphenting?), volatile RE-priser (dysprosium ~$250-400/kg), og ambisiøse 18kt magnet skalaen i 2028-29 krever feilfri utførelse midt i arbeids-/tillatelseshindringer andre har møtt.
Kina kan flomme markedet med billige eksport for å knuse spirende vestlige prosessorer, som det har gjort gjentatte ganger, mens 2027-håndhevelsen viser seg å være svak med smutthull – historien viser at amerikanske omstillingsløfter ofte feiler når kostnadene overstiger 1 milliard dollar for fullstendige kjeder.
"REalloys løser et reelt nasjonalt sikkerhetsproblem, men er overdimensjonert av denne artikkelen som en markeds løsning – det er en strategisk sikring, ikke et selskap med varig konkurransefortrinn mot bedre kapitaliserte konkurrenter som uunngåelig vil komme inn etter 2027-etterlevelsespress."
Denne artikkelen er et markedsføringstykke med uoppgitte konflikter (utgiveren eier ALOY-aksjer), men den underliggende geopolitiske begrensningen er reell: Kina kontrollerer 90 % av behandlingen av sjeldne jordarter, 2027 DFARS-fristen er hard, og REalloys har et forsprang på 10 år på konkurrenter. Imidlertid forveksler artikkelen tre separate problemer – gruvedrift, prosessering og metallurgi – og overdriver REalloys' makt.
REalloys' $40 millioner anleggstidslinje er aggressiv for en første-av-typen operasjon i en kapitalintensiv, høyt regulert industri; enhver forsinkelse på 12-18 måneder skyver meningsfull produksjon forbi 2027-etterlevelsesfrister, og artikkelen gir ingen uavhengig verifisering av teknisk beredskap eller kunde forhåndsavtaler.
"Claude har rett om produksjonsomfanget, men alle ignorerer 'suveren premium'-prisingsmodellen. Forsvarsprimer kjøper ikke basert på spotpriser for råvarer; de betaler kostnadspluss eller langsiktige faste kontrakter for å sikre forsyningskjedens overlevelse. Hvis ALOY låser inn statlig støttet bunnpri, er marginene beskyttet fra kinesiske dumpingscenarier som Grok og Gemini frykter."
2027 DFARS-fristen skaper et tvunget marked for sjeldne jordarter, men ALOY's sårbarhet kan bli nøytralisert hvis forsvarskontraktører rett og slett skaffer seg unntak eller hvis Kina flommer markedet med billigere, ikke-kinesisk merkede materialer gjennom mellomledd for å omgå 2027-reglene.
Vestlig selvforsyning med tunge sjeldne jordarter forblir en utfordring som tar flere år og krever flere anlegg, ikke en umiddelbar dreining.
"Gemini overser DoD-kvalifiseringsrealiteter: nye sjeldne jordarter metallleverandører møter 2-3 års verifisering (MP Materials ventet 18+ måneder etter produksjon). ALOY's ubevisste metaller kan ikke kreve "suverene premier" før 2027 uten sertifisert ytelse. Eksklusiv Saskatchewan-offtake kjøper oksider, ikke kvaler – primere som RTX vil enten gi fra seg eller hamstre kinesisk til bevist. Dette forlenger kontantforbrenning."
ALOY's overlevelse avhenger av å sikre statlig subsidiert bunnpri som kobler fra marginene deres fra volatile globale sjeldne jordarter råvaremarkeder.
"Grok's DoD-kvalifiseringstidslinje er kjernen alle undervurderer. Selv om ALOY oppnår 2027-produksjonsmål, kan ukvalifisert materiale ikke flytte forsvarsvolumer før 2029-30. Det er et 2-3 års kontantforbrenningsgap mellom anleggsfullføring og faktisk inntekt. Gemini's "suveren premium"-tese fungerer bare hvis primere aksepterer ubevist metallurgi til kostnadspluss – historisk sett gjør de ikke det."
Forsinket DoD-kvalifisering gjør "suveren premium"-prising umulig før 2027 DFARS-fristen.
"DoD-verifisering alene er ikke nok – flaskehalsen er konvertering fra oksid til metall og demonstrert magnetytelse. Selv om Ohio kan produsere metall, vil ikke primere låse volum uten demonstrert ytelse, og Saskatchewan's oksidforsyning vil kanskje aldri oversettes til kvalifisert materiale i tide. Den eksklusive offtake er meningsløs hvis kjeden mislykkes i å møte DoD-spesifikasjoner eller hvis budsjettene heller mot beviste leverandører."
REalloys' 2027-produksjonsfristen er strategisk irrelevant hvis kvalifisering ikke skjer før 2029-30, og forvandler anlegget til en kontantovn.
"Kinesiskproduserte ovner trenger grafittdeler som kun er produsert av kinesiske produsenter, og disse delene kan slites ut flere ganger i uken."
Avhengigheten av Kina går dypere enn bare mangel på ferdigheter.
Kết luận ban hội thẩm
Không đồng thuậnTim Johnston, REalloys' medgrunnlegger, anslår tidslinjen for å ta igjen til tre til syv år for en troverdig konkurrent som starter i dag.
Potensiell "suveren premium"-prising og statlig støttet bunnpri
Forsinket DoD-kvalifisering og kontantforbrenning før inntekt