Import ban on Myanmar ore bolsters medium-to-heavy rare earth prices

Published: May 17, 2019 11:11
As of May 16, prices of dysprosium oxide climbed to 1.6-1.62 million yuan/mt, from 1.48-1.49 million yuan/mt on May 7

SHANGHAI, May 17 (SMM) – Prices of medium-to-heavy rare earth, such as dysprosium oxide and terbium oxide, extended their increases this week as imports of rare earth ore from Myanmar through Yunnan Tengchong Customs were again halted on Tuesday May 14.

The prohibition followed after the Tengchong Customs in November of last year restricted imports of commodities from Myanmar. The customs acts as the sole entry point from Myanmar into China. It remains unclear when the ban should be lifted. 

As of Thursday May 16, prices of dysprosium oxide climbed to 1.6-1.62 million yuan/mt, from 1.48-1.49 million yuan/mt on Tuesday May 7, SMM assessed. Prices of terbium oxide rose from 3.14-3.17 million yuan/mt on May 7, to 3.3-3.35 million yuan/mt as of May 16. 

Market participants expected further upside room in prices of dysprosium, terbium oxides in the weeks ahead. This prevented sellers from letting go cargoes, SMM learned. Higher offers sidelined downstream buyers, and drove them to seek alternatives to dysprosium, terbium oxides. 

Customs data showed that China imported some 25,829 mt ion-absorbed rare earth ore, which is rich in medium and heavy rare earth elements, from Myanmar in 2018. 

Domestic imports of mixed rare earth carbonate in January were below half of the imports in January 2018. A decline of 67% in the imports of Myanmar’s products accounted for the loss.

Data Source Statement: Except for publicly available information, all other data are processed by SMM based on publicly available information, market communication, and relying on SMM‘s internal database model. They are for reference only and do not constitute decision-making recommendations.

For any inquiries or to learn more information, please contact: lemonzhao@smm.cn
For more information on how to access our research reports, please contact:service.en@smm.cn
Related News
Australian Govt Orders Sale of Chinese Stake in Rare Earth Firm Amid Security Concerns
6 hours ago
Australian Govt Orders Sale of Chinese Stake in Rare Earth Firm Amid Security Concerns
Read More
Australian Govt Orders Sale of Chinese Stake in Rare Earth Firm Amid Security Concerns
Australian Govt Orders Sale of Chinese Stake in Rare Earth Firm Amid Security Concerns
[SMM Rare Earth News Flash] According to foreign media reports, the Australian government ordered six China-linked shareholders of rare earth company Northern Minerals to sell their stakes within two weeks, with combined holdings of nearly 27%. This was the second such intervention by Canberra in two years, aimed at protecting the country's heavy rare earth industry from external influence. The company is developing the Browns Range heavy rare earth project in Western Australia, where products such as dysprosium and terbium are critical to national defense and the semiconductor industry.
6 hours ago
Arafura Rare Earths Inks Deal with Traxys to Supply US Critical Minerals for Defense and Tech Sectors
6 hours ago
Arafura Rare Earths Inks Deal with Traxys to Supply US Critical Minerals for Defense and Tech Sectors
Read More
Arafura Rare Earths Inks Deal with Traxys to Supply US Critical Minerals for Defense and Tech Sectors
Arafura Rare Earths Inks Deal with Traxys to Supply US Critical Minerals for Defense and Tech Sectors
Arafura Rare Earths, listed on the Australian Securities Exchange, has signed a binding offtake letter of intent with global physical rare earth trader Traxys North America to support the revival and development of domestic manufacturing in the US automotive, national defense, and advanced technology sectors. Traxys plans to supply 500 mt/year of neodymium-praseodymium (NdPr) oxide and 7.5 mt/year of dysprosium-terbium (DyTb) oxide from Arafura's Nolans project in Australia's Northern Territory to US enterprises, including potential supply to "Project Vault" managed by the US Export-Import Bank (Exim). The plan aims to provide a tactical buffer against critical minerals supply shocks.
6 hours ago
Brazilian Regulator Cade Launches Probe into USAR's Acquisition of Serra Verde Rare Earth Mine
7 hours ago
Brazilian Regulator Cade Launches Probe into USAR's Acquisition of Serra Verde Rare Earth Mine
Read More
Brazilian Regulator Cade Launches Probe into USAR's Acquisition of Serra Verde Rare Earth Mine
Brazilian Regulator Cade Launches Probe into USAR's Acquisition of Serra Verde Rare Earth Mine
Brazil's antitrust regulator Cade launched an investigation into US rare earth company USAR's proposed acquisition of Brazilian rare earth producer Serra Verde. Serra Verde is currently Brazil's only operational rare earth mine. The transaction includes a 15-year offtake agreement between Serra Verde and a special purpose vehicle funded by US government agencies including the Department of Commerce and the Department of Energy. The agreement explicitly stipulates lowest prices for rare earth elements such as neodymium, praseodymium, dysprosium, and terbium.
7 hours ago
Import ban on Myanmar ore bolsters medium-to-heavy rare earth prices - Shanghai Metals Market (SMM)