The Race to Secure Rare Earths
August 26, 2025
Read Time 3 MIN
Rare earth elements and strategic metals may sound like niche materials reserved for scientists and engineers. In reality, they are the hidden backbone of modern technology—powering everything from the phone in your pocket to fighter jets, wind turbines, and electric vehicles. And as the geopolitical landscape shifts, so too does the investment opportunity.
In a recent webinar, VanEck’s Andrew Musgraves and Kendall Duncan highlight growing public and private sector alignment to build a secure, U.S.-based rare earth supply chain.
Key takeaways from the webinar include:
- Rare earths and strategic metals are vital to current and emerging technologies
- Security of supply is a growing concern
- Nations – predominately led by the U.S. – are focused on reviving their supply chains
- VanEck offers liquid exposure to the opportunity set through the VanEck Rare Earth and Strategic Metals ETF (REMX)
Why Rare Earths Matter
Rare earth elements possess unique properties like magnetic strength, heat resistance, and light transmission. These are not easily substituted, making them essential in sectors where performance is critical.
Strategic metals broaden the scope to include materials like lithium, cobalt, tungsten, and titanium, which are resources governments deem critical to economic stability and national security. Together, they are foundational to three fast-growing sectors:
- Clean energy: Rare earth magnets power wind turbines, EV motors, grid-scale batteries, and even next-gen nuclear systems.
- Defense: F-35 fighter jets, Navy destroyers, and submarines are examples of defense-related items that require large amounts of rare earth materials to produce. Without these metals, modern defense systems lose their edge.
- Consumer tech and healthcare: Smartphones, headphones, flat-screen TVs, MRI machines, and precision surgical equipment all depend on rare earths.
In short: without these materials, much of the 21st-century economy doesn’t work.
Rare Earths and Strategic Metals: Defined
Source as of May 2025: MarketVector Indexes GmbH
The Supply Chain Challenge
Extracting and refining rare earths is difficult, costly, and environmentally sensitive. Many rare earths and strategic metals are primarily produced and refined in China, posing a potential threat to supply security and prompting numerous countries to reassess their sourcing strategies and invest in domestic mining efforts. As the chart below highlights, China controls over 90% of production and refining capacity, with a similar dominance in strategic metals like lithium and cobalt.
Source: IEA. Data as of December 2024.
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China’s dominance was built through decades of centralized state strategy with the country consolidating mines, subsidizing refining, and allowing less stringent environmental standards. And China has shown a willingness to use its position strategically, tightening export restrictions when geopolitics heat up. Recent moves restricting certain exports in response to U.S. tariffs sent prices spiking and supply chains scrambling.
For the U.S. and its allies, access to these materials is no longer just an economic question. It’s a matter of national security and energy independence.
A U.S. and Global Revival
Recognizing the stakes, governments are adapting. In the U.S., MP Materials—the operator of the Mountain Pass mine in California—has become a flagship project. With more than $500 million in funding and offtake agreements from both the Department of Defense and Apple, MP is scaling magnet production and downstream processing.
Other nations are following suit with governments and corporations mobilizing to build rare earth and strategic metals supply chains outside China. Several notable, recent announcements highlight the size, scope, and global coordination of that effort:
| Country | Organization / Lead Entity | 2025 Headline Investment / Project Announcement |
| U.S. | Department of Defense | US$400m preferred-equity investment in MP Materials to build rare earth supply |
| U.S. | Apple | US$500m multi-year offtake commitment with MP Materials |
| E.U. | European Commission | Expected €22.5b covering 47 mining/refining projects across 13 member states |
| Australia | National Reconstruction Fund | AU$200m equity stake in Arafura's Nolans rare earth mine and refinery |
| India | National Critical Mineral Mission | State geological survey tasked with identifying 1,200 exploration projects |
| Japan | JOGMEC | €110m equity/debt for a rare earth refining facility in France |
| U.K. | CirculaREEconomy | £11m grant for building UK magnet-recycling chain |
| South Korea | Supply Chain Stabilization Fund | ₩50b per year fund for public-private overseas mine stakes and stockpiles |
Source: IEA, Reuters. Data as of August 2025
These projects will take years to scale, but the direction is clear: a coordinated effort to diversify supply away from China.
How to Invest
Directly purchasing rare earths isn’t feasible for most investors—these materials are not traded on traditional commodity exchanges. That’s where REMX comes in.
The VanEck Rare Earth and Strategic Metals ETF (REMX) provides pure-play, comprehensive, global exposure with holdings generating at least 50% of revenues from rare earths and strategic metals.
Important Disclosures
This is not an offer to buy or sell, or a recommendation to buy or sell any of the securities, financial instruments or digital assets mentioned herein. The information presented does not involve the rendering of personalized investment, financial, legal, tax advice, or any call to action. Certain statements contained herein may constitute projections, forecasts and other forward-looking statements, which do not reflect actual results, are for illustrative purposes only, are valid as of the date of this communication, and are subject to change without notice. Actual future performance of any assets or industries mentioned are unknown. Information provided by third party sources are believed to be reliable and have not been independently verified for accuracy or completeness and cannot be guaranteed. VanEck does not guarantee the accuracy of third party data. The information herein represents the opinion of the speaker(s), but not necessarily those of VanEck or its other employees.
An investment in the Fund may be subject to risks which include, but are not limited to, risks related to investments in rare earth and strategic metals companies, basic materials sector, regulatory action and changes in governments, special risk considerations of investing in Australian, Asian, Chinese, and Canadian issuers, Stock Connect, foreign securities, emerging market issuers, foreign currency, depositary receipts, small- and medium-capitalization companies, cash transactions, equity securities, market, operational, index tracking, authorized participant concentration, no guarantee of active trading market, trading issues, passive management, fund shares trading, premium/discount, liquidity of fund shares, issuer-specific changes, non-diversified and index-related concentration risks, all of which may adversely affect the Fund. Emerging market issuers and foreign securities may be subject to securities markets, political and economic, investment and repatriation restrictions, different rules and regulations, less publicly available financial information, foreign currency and exchange rates, operational and settlement, and corporate and securities laws risks. Small- and medium-capitalization companies may be subject to elevated risks. Investments in Chinese issuers may entail additional risks that include, among others, lack of liquidity and price volatility, currency devaluations and exchange rate fluctuations, intervention by the Chinese government, nationalization or expropriation, limitations on the use of brokers, and trade limitations.
Investing involves substantial risk and high volatility, including possible loss of principal. An investor should consider the investment objective, risks, charges and expenses of the Funds carefully before investing. To obtain a prospectus and summary prospectus, which contain this and other information, call 800.826.2333 or visit vaneck.com. Please read the prospectus and summary prospectus carefully before investing.
© Van Eck Securities Corporation, Distributor, a wholly owned subsidiary of Van Eck Associates Corporation.
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Important Disclosures
This is not an offer to buy or sell, or a recommendation to buy or sell any of the securities, financial instruments or digital assets mentioned herein. The information presented does not involve the rendering of personalized investment, financial, legal, tax advice, or any call to action. Certain statements contained herein may constitute projections, forecasts and other forward-looking statements, which do not reflect actual results, are for illustrative purposes only, are valid as of the date of this communication, and are subject to change without notice. Actual future performance of any assets or industries mentioned are unknown. Information provided by third party sources are believed to be reliable and have not been independently verified for accuracy or completeness and cannot be guaranteed. VanEck does not guarantee the accuracy of third party data. The information herein represents the opinion of the speaker(s), but not necessarily those of VanEck or its other employees.
An investment in the Fund may be subject to risks which include, but are not limited to, risks related to investments in rare earth and strategic metals companies, basic materials sector, regulatory action and changes in governments, special risk considerations of investing in Australian, Asian, Chinese, and Canadian issuers, Stock Connect, foreign securities, emerging market issuers, foreign currency, depositary receipts, small- and medium-capitalization companies, cash transactions, equity securities, market, operational, index tracking, authorized participant concentration, no guarantee of active trading market, trading issues, passive management, fund shares trading, premium/discount, liquidity of fund shares, issuer-specific changes, non-diversified and index-related concentration risks, all of which may adversely affect the Fund. Emerging market issuers and foreign securities may be subject to securities markets, political and economic, investment and repatriation restrictions, different rules and regulations, less publicly available financial information, foreign currency and exchange rates, operational and settlement, and corporate and securities laws risks. Small- and medium-capitalization companies may be subject to elevated risks. Investments in Chinese issuers may entail additional risks that include, among others, lack of liquidity and price volatility, currency devaluations and exchange rate fluctuations, intervention by the Chinese government, nationalization or expropriation, limitations on the use of brokers, and trade limitations.
Investing involves substantial risk and high volatility, including possible loss of principal. An investor should consider the investment objective, risks, charges and expenses of the Funds carefully before investing. To obtain a prospectus and summary prospectus, which contain this and other information, call 800.826.2333 or visit vaneck.com. Please read the prospectus and summary prospectus carefully before investing.
© Van Eck Securities Corporation, Distributor, a wholly owned subsidiary of Van Eck Associates Corporation.
