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Silver: Why the $100 mark is both within reach and dangerous
Silver: Why the $100 mark is both within reach and dangerous
May 28, 2026 Silber-Anleger erleben derzeit ein zähes Ringen: Kurzfristig fehlt dem Markt unterhalb der Marke von 75 US-Dollar jSilver investors are currently facing a tough struggle: In the short term, the market lacks the necessary momentum below the $75-per-ounce mark. Yet explosive momentum is building in the background. While Bank of America (BofA) believes another jump to the three-digit $100 mark is possible before the end of the year, the analyst team also warns against premature optimism. Such a price surge is unlikely to signal a lasting trend reversal. Rather, according to the analysts, the silver market is facing a profound fundamental shift in which the industrial base is increasingly crumbling. The balancing act between precious metal fantasy and industrial reality Bank of America’s latest precious metals analysis paints a picture of a divided market. In the short term, silver has the potential to break through the $100-per-ounce mark in the wake of a sustained gold rally. However, this speculative high is unlikely to last: Analysts are already forecasting a return of the price to a level of around $75 as early as the second quarter of 2027. Currently, the gold-silver ratio of 59.43 points reflects this indecision. It remains in the middle of its months-long consolidation range—an indicator of a market that is sensitively oscillating between short-term speculation and a fundamental revaluation. Although the silver market is heading toward its sixth consecutive year of deficit, the sustainability of this supply shortage is under massive threat in the medium term. Solar Industry in Austerity Mode: The Key Demand Pillar Wavers The strongest headwind for the silver price is emerging, of all places, in its former flagship segment—photovoltaics. Faced with historically high silver prices, solar module manufacturers are responding with drastic efficiency measures. Under sustained margin pressure, they are systematically reducing the silver content in the cells or switching to cheaper substitute metals. According to BofA analysts, silver demand from the solar sector already reached its historic peak last year. This trend is exacerbated by stagnating solar production in China and the prospect of declining new installations in the current year. Since demand growth in other industrial sectors is too weak to close the gap left by the solar industry, the silver market faces a fundamental easing of supply-demand dynamics: as early as 2026, the deficit could shrink by a massive 90%. Should industrial demand continue to weaken, even moderate sales by financial investors would be enough to push the market into a physical surplus. Investors as the Deciding Factor In this changed environment, silver is likely to be perceived and traded more as a classic precious metal rather than an industrial metal in the future. Investor demand thus becomes the decisive price factor. This carries risks, as precious metals have recently suffered from the restrictive interest rate policy and expectations of further rate hikes by the U.S. Federal Reserve. Rising yields increase the opportunity costs for non-interest-bearing investments and weigh equally on both gold and silver. Nevertheless, silver remains a strategic element of the global energy transition. An abrupt slump in solar demand is not expected. Demand is further fueled by geopolitical conflicts such as the war in Iran, which continues to drive the global push for green energy and alternatives to fossil fuels. Geopolitics and Trade Barriers as Price Drivers Just how volatile the physical market can be was already evident at the start of the year, when the silver price briefly shot up to $120 per ounce amid fierce competition for physical metal. A major source of uncertainty remains the upcoming renegotiation of the North American Free Trade Agreement between the U.S., Canada, and Mexico. Since Mexico and Canada are the main suppliers to the U.S. market, significant trade risks loom. Concerns about potential tariffs have already prompted banks and market participants to massively increase their holdings within the U.S. This domestic hoarding is draining important liquidity from the global market. According to BofA, this physical withdrawal is the main reason silver has recently managed to climb back above the $80 mark—even though physically backed ETFs are continuously recording outflows and the latest CFTC data signal rather subdued interest in new net long positions in the futures markets. Conclusion: In the short term, silver retains the potential for a breakout toward the $100 mark. However, the foundation for this rise is becoming more fragile. Investors betting on silver should keep an eye on the weakening industrial data, which could set tight time limits on the rally. Source: https://goldinvest.de/en/silver-why-the-usd100-mark-is-both-within-reach-and-dangerous
Jun 1, 2026 14:05
[SMM Analysis] Why Did High-Grade NPI Fall Despite Tighter Costs? NPI Market May Review and June Outlook
[SMM Analysis] Why Did High-Grade NPI Fall Despite Tighter Costs? NPI Market May Review and June Outlook
May high-grade NPI prices fell despite tighter costs, as nickel futures retreated, stainless margins weakened, and scrap regained its cost advantage. Indonesian policy and production-cut expectations built a floor, but weak downstream demand capped any rebound.
Jun 1, 2026 17:41
[SMM Insights] Coking Coal Competitive Landscape Under Energy Crisis
Chapter 1: The Energy Crisis Reshapes Coking Coal Value In 2026, with the Russia-Ukraine war still ongoing and the U.S.-Iran war reigniting, crude oil price centers continued to shift upward. Coupled with persistent geopolitical conflicts in other regions worldwide, energy security demand climbed, driving a systematic revaluation of coking coal value. Moreover, against the backdrop of high oil prices, the cost advantages of coal-based chemicals over oil-based chemicals began to emerge, improving the economics of coal-to-oil substitution and expanding coking coal demand. Coking coal possesses the dual attributes of industrial raw material and energy commodity, supported by both rigid demand and high elasticity to energy prices, with premium capacity far exceeding that of ordinary industrial products. Market perception underwent a fundamental shift, as coking coal gradually shed its subordinate positioning within the steel industry chain and was upgraded to a scarce strategic energy asset. The energy crisis restructured its valuation logic. Pricing broke free from the singular steel supply-demand framework and was incorporated into the global energy price comparison system. Energy and security premiums elevated the valuation center, making it an important target for hedging geopolitical risks and allocating strategic resources. Chapter 2: Global Coking Coal Market Landscape (1) Global Coking Coal Resource Distribution Data source: publicly available data Global coking coal resources account for 13% of total global coal resources, approximately 1,140 billion mt. About 49% are distributed in Europe, 29% in Asia, and 19% in North America. The economically recoverable reserves of coking coal are approximately 500 billion mt, of which high-quality coking coal with low ash and low sulfur content amounts to only about 60 billion mt. Economically recoverable coking coal resources are primarily concentrated in three countries: Russia (42%, approximately 210 billion mt), China (23%, approximately 115 billion mt), and the US (18%, approximately 90 billion mt), with other countries accounting for relatively small shares. (II) Global Coking Coal Production Distribution Data source: publicly available data Global coking coal production in 2025 was approximately 1.1 billion mt, with a highly concentrated production landscape. China ranked first at 514 million mt, accounting for 47% of global production and serving as the core supply pillar, though virtually all output was consumed domestically. Australia (172 million mt) and Russia (98 million mt) ranked second and third, followed closely by the US (59 million mt), Mongolia (54 million mt), and Canada (32 million mt), while India produced 25 million mt and Indonesia produced 11 million mt. These eight countries collectively accounted for 88% of global coking coal production. Data source: World Steel Association, IEA Major producing countries: China firmly held the top global position with absolute volumes rising from 480 million mt (2020) to 514 million mt (2025), achieving the highest global increase of 34 million mt, primarily driven by new domestic mine commissioning and supply security policies. Russia and Mongolia became key growth contributors with increases of 12 million mt and 23 million mt respectively — the former benefiting from post-sanction market redirection and new mine development, while the latter achieved substantial production increases through upgraded border customs clearance with China and railway cost reductions. Australia's capacity remained basically flat. EU countries (Germany, Poland) and Ukraine continued to cut production due to factors such as coal phase-out policies, aging mines, and geopolitical conflicts, while the US, India, Mozambique and other countries achieved capacity growth driven by export demand and downstream industry boost. (III) Analysis of Global Coking Coal Export Trade Data source: publicly available data Global coking coal export trade is highly concentrated in five countries—Australia, Russia, Mongolia, the US, and Indonesia—primarily for the following reasons: Monopolistic resource endowment: Russia accounts for 42% of the world's recoverable coking coal reserves, and the US accounts for 18%. Australia possesses globally scarce high-quality coking coal resources with low ash and low sulfur content. Mongolia and Indonesia also have distinctive coal varieties suited to blending needs. These resource barriers create a supply-side monopoly. Locational and logistics cost advantages: Australia's coking coal producing regions are adjacent to east coast ports, enabling low-cost seaborne access to the world's core steel-producing regions. Mongolia's mining areas border China, with overland logistics providing direct access to the Chinese market. Russia, the US, and Indonesia leverage mature seaborne and cross-border railway networks to achieve efficient coverage of global demand markets. Industrial structure and supply-demand mismatch: Although China holds 23% of the world's coking coal reserves, as the world's largest steel producer, China has extremely rigid coking coal consumption demand, making it the world's largest coking coal importer. In contrast, the five countries mentioned above have limited domestic consumption and surplus coking coal supply. Their industrial structures are centered on resource exports, providing a supply foundation for large-scale exports. Coal quality and global demand matching: The coal varieties from these countries form a complementary supply system. Australian coal is suited to high-end coke demand, Mongolian coal serves as a premium blending raw material, Russian coal covers the full range of varieties, and US and Indonesian coal meet the blending needs of different steelmaking processes. This precisely matches the rigid blending needs of global steel enterprises, forming a stable export pattern. Chapter 3: China's Coking Coal Market (1) Current Supply and Demand of Coking Coal in China Data sources: National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), General Administration of Customs of China, publicly available data Supply side, China's coking coal concentrate production grew steadily, rising gradually from 480 million mt in 2020 to 514 million mt in 2025, with overall supply scale remaining stable and no wild swings observed. Import and export side, imports became the core variable supplementing China's domestic supply: imports briefly declined 24% YoY to 54.768 million mt in 2021, then entered a sustained expansion trajectory, with 2025 imports surging 117% from 2021 to 118 million mt; exports remained at low levels over the long term, once plunging 89% YoY to 92,000 mt in 2021, then gradually rebounding, but the 2025 export volume of 1.175 million mt had minimal impact on the overall market. Demand side, coking coal concentrate demand also maintained mild growth, with 2025 demand reaching 628 million mt, a modest increase from 2020. Demand growth was primarily supported by the concurrent expansion of coke production (coke production reached 502 million mt in 2025). Overall, China's domestic coking coal production growth was unable to fully match demand expansion, with imported resources effectively filling the supply-demand gap. (II) China's Coking Coal Supply-Demand Balance Data source: National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), publicly available data From 2020 to 2025, China's coking coal concentrate market completed a transition from tight supply to a tight balance with a slight surplus, with both supply and demand expanding simultaneously and market operational stability improving significantly. The supply side exhibited a sustained and steady growth trend, with the release of domestic capacity combined with supplementary import resources jointly driving continuous enhancement of supply capability. The demand side maintained mild expansion, primarily supported by rigid production demand from the coke and steel industries, with overall growth notably slower than the supply side. By phase, from 2020 to 2022, the market was in a state of persistent undersupply, with supply gaps appearing in all three years, and the industry was highly reliant on imported resources to fill the supply-demand gap. In 2023, the market reached a structural turning point, achieving a supply surplus for the first time; in 2024, the surplus scale expanded significantly; in 2025, the surplus pulled back, but the market had thoroughly shed its prolonged deficit status. With China's coking coal concentrate supply assurance capability continuing to improve, combined with flexible adjustment of import channels, the market entered a healthy tight balance range where supply was slightly greater than demand. Chapter 4: Global Coking Coal Supply-Demand Balance Data source: IEA, publicly available data From 2020 to 2025, the global coking coal market gradually shifted from maintaining a slight surplus to a slight supply-demand deficit. The long-term tightening of global premium coking coal resources, compounded by multiple external factors such as the restructuring of the global energy landscape triggered by the energy crisis and shifts in national energy policies, ultimately drove the global coking coal market from a relatively loose state in the earlier period to a slight deficit. Chapter 5: Summary Affected by geopolitical conflicts and energy transition, the strategic value of coking coal continued to rise, with energy security premiums becoming prominent, and the overall industry landscape gradually evolving toward a tight supply-demand balance. Global coking coal production is limited, with low-ash, low-sulfur premium resources being particularly scarce. Reserves, capacity, and export trade are all highly concentrated, with a few countries such as Russia, China, the U.S., and Australia controlling the supply side, forming a monopolistic landscape through advantages in resources, logistics, and coal grade complementarity, while the energy crisis brings new opportunities and challenges. Overall, coking coal markets both in and outside China have shifted toward a tight balance, with structural shortages of premium coal grades being a prominent issue. The coking coal market may hold up well throughout 2026.
Jun 3, 2026 11:39
Off-Season Dragged Down Rare Earth Prices in May, Pr-Nd Oxide and Dysprosium Oxide Saw Significant Declines — How Will the Market Evolve? [SMM Monthly Analysis]
In May, the rare earth market entered its traditional off-season. Although occasional factors such as major producers' procurement briefly boosted rare earth prices, weak downstream demand kept prices under pressure and pulling back overall throughout May. Pr-Nd oxide and dysprosium oxide fell 11% and 11.79% respectively in May, while terbium oxide also edged down. On the supply side, however, an increasing trend emerged — domestic rare earth oxide production was up MoM across the board in May. Combined with continued inflows of ex-China sources, imports of unlisted rare earth oxides in the first four months surged 103% YoY. This supply-demand mismatch further suppressed rare earth price performance in May. Since early June, Pr-Nd oxide and other rare earth products have seen slight price rebounds, driven by major producers' restocking and futures fluctuations. However, the off-season demand shortfall persists — how will the rare earth market perform going forward? Pr-Nd Oxide Down 11% in May, Dysprosium Oxide Down 11.79%, Terbium Oxide Down 1.63% Light rare earth prices: Taking the historical price trend of Pr-Nd oxide as an example, according to SMM quotes: the average price of Pr-Nd oxide on May 29 was 687,500 yuan/mt, compared with its April 30 average price of 772,500 yuan/mt, representing a decline of 85,000 yuan/mt in May, with a monthly drop of 11%. Entering June, Pr-Nd oxide continued to rise, with an average price of 700,500 yuan/mt on June 2. Medium-heavy rare earth prices: Taking the trend of dysprosium oxide as an example, according to SMM quotes: the average price of dysprosium oxide on May 29 was 1,230 yuan/kg, compared with its April 30 average price of 1,375 yuan/kg, representing a decline of 145 yuan/kg in May, with a monthly drop of 11.79%. Entering June, dysprosium oxide prices edged up slightly, with an average price of 1,240 yuan/kg on June 2. Taking the trend of terbium oxide as an example, according to SMM quotes: the average price of terbium oxide on May 29 was 6,025 yuan/kg, compared with its April 30 average price of 6,125 yuan/kg, representing a decline of 100 yuan/kg in May, with a monthly drop of 1.63%. Entering June, terbium oxide prices rose slightly, with an average price of 6,035 yuan/kg on June 2. Oxide Production Up MoM Across the Board in May Production: Due to increased production from scrap recycling enterprises and production resumptions at some enterprises that had previously undergone equipment maintenance, production of Pr-Nd oxide and other rare earth oxides edged up in May compared with April. Imports of Unlisted Rare Earth Oxides Up 103% YoY, January-April According to data from the General Administration of Customs, China's imports of thorium ore and concentrates totaled 21,443 mt from January to April 2026, nearly flat YoY. Imports in April were 4,081 mt, up 22% MoM but up 32% YoY. From January to April 2026, China's imports of unlisted rare earth oxides reached approximately 26,123 mt, a significant YoY increase of 103%. Currently, the operating rate of ex-China rare earth mines remains relatively high, keeping actual supply in the international market at ample levels. Outlook Recently, rare earth prices rose due to futures market price fluctuations and periodic restocking by some large enterprises. However, as downstream orders were unsatisfactory, even though raw material inventory at downstream enterprises remained at relatively low levels, end-user wait-and-see sentiment was strong and enterprises showed little enthusiasm for restocking and stockpiling. It is expected that rare earth prices will be in the doldrums again until downstream orders see a notable increase and market confidence shows clear recovery. Recommended reading:
Jun 3, 2026 20:09

Latest News

Rare Earth Market Shows Mixed Performance, Tug-of-War Between Upstream and Downstream Continues [SMM Rare Earth Weekly Review]
[SMM Rare Earth Weekly Review: Rare Earth Market Shows Mixed Performance, Tug-of-War Between Upstream and Downstream Continues] Influenced by short covering by bears, futures prices rose, slightly boosting downstream willingness to restock. Procurement volumes for Pr-Nd oxide edged up compared to the previous period, and supplier quotes also rebounded slightly. As of today, Pr-Nd oxide prices fluctuated upward to 697,000-700,000 yuan/mt.
12 hours ago
USA Rare Earth to Invest $1.2B in South Carolina Magnet and Rare Earth Metal Plant
[SMM Rare Earth News Flash] USA Rare Earth announced on June 2 that it will invest $1.2 billion to build a new magnet manufacturing and rare earth metal refining plant in Cherokee County, South Carolina, located at the Bailey Industrial Park in Blacksburg. Once operational, the plant is expected to produce 6,400 mt of sintered NdFeB permanent magnets and 5,000 mt of rare earth metals and alloys annually. Combined with the expansion plan for the Stillwater plant in Oklahoma, the company's total domestic capacity will reach 10,000 mt of NdFeB magnets and 10,000 mt of rare earth metals and alloys per year. The project is the company's third plant in the US, following the separation plant in Colorado and the magnet plant in Oklahoma, and is expected to begin commissioning in 2028.
18 hours ago
European Resources Identifies New Anomalies at Korsnäs Rare Earth Project, Expands Exploration Area
[SMM Rare Earth News Flash] ASX-listed European Resources announced that multiple untested anomalies were identified south and east of the existing resource area during the Phase 2 passive seismic survey at the Korsnäs rare earth project in Finland, validating the effectiveness of the exploration technique. The new anomalies lie outside the historical gravity coverage, indicating continued along-strike extension of the southern target corridor. The company has applied for an exploration permit extension to the south, and if the 6.3 square kilometer Poikel permit is approved, the total project area will increase to 19.9 square kilometers, further enhancing the exploration potential of this key European rare earth project.
18 hours ago
Solvay Secures Rare Earth Supply Deal with Viridis for European Demand Growth
[SMM Rare Earth News Brief] Belgium's Solvay has reached a supply agreement with Australia's Viridis Mining & Minerals to receive rare earth raw materials from its Colossus ion-adsorption ore project in Brazil starting in 2028, processing them into high-purity oxides at its La Rochelle plant in France, covering key magnetic material elements including neodymium, praseodymium, dysprosium, and terbium. This move will ensure Solvay meets Europe's growing rare earth demand, helping it achieve its goal of covering 30% of European demand by 2030, while also promoting diversification of the Western rare earth supply chain.
Jun 3, 2026 13:07
Off-Season Dragged Down Rare Earth Prices in May, Pr-Nd Oxide and Dysprosium Oxide Saw Significant Declines — How Will the Market Evolve? [SMM Monthly Analysis]
Jun 3, 2026 20:09
SMM Launches Rare Earth Evening Price Data for Accurate Market Tracking
To better track rare earth price swings and support long‑term contract settlements, SMM launched “Evening Prices” (since April 27, 2026) for Pr‑Nd and gadolinium, available via data terminal and Renrenkan. As afternoon transaction peaks have shifted due to volatility (e.g., Pr‑Nd alloy: 1.09M to 830k yuan/mt in H1 2026), evening prices reflect actual afternoon trades, benefiting metal‑magnet contracts. For magnet‑end‑user annual contracts, morning prices are recommended.
Jun 2, 2026 18:26
NdFeB Blank Production Rises in May 2026, Stable Outlook for June
[SMM Rare Earth Permanent Magnets News Flash] According to the SMM survey, NdFeB blank production in May 2026 was 32,727 mt, with an industry average operating rate of 76.56%, up 0.38% MoM and 14% YoY. Production in June is expected to be 32,402 mt, flat MoM.
Jun 2, 2026 16:25
China's Thorium and Rare Earth Imports Surge, Market Shows "Hot Outside, Cold Inside" Phenomenon
May 31, 2026 22:10
Zimbabwe Strengthened Mineral Controls, Minor Metal Sector Rose Over 3%, Yunnan Germanium Industry, Jin Mo Shares Hit Daily Limit [SMM News Flash]
May 28, 2026 20:30
Rare Earth Prices Fluctuated as Upstream and Downstream Sectors Continued Stalemate [SMM Rare Earth Weekly Review]
[SMM Rare Earth Weekly Review: Rare Earth Prices Fluctuated, Upstream and Downstream Remained in Stalemate] Affected by futures price fluctuations combined with periodic restocking by some major producers, Pr-Nd oxide prices fluctuated relatively frequently. Upstream and downstream continued to remain in a stalemate, with suppliers maintaining relatively firm offers overall, while downstream metal producers maintained a strong wait-and-see sentiment. As of today, Pr-Nd oxide prices fluctuated downward to 682,000-688,000 yuan/mt.
May 28, 2026 13:47
Policy Tailwinds Combined with Rising Expectations of Improving Demand, Rare Earth Permanent Magnets Concept Strengthened, Xiangdian Co. Hit Daily Limit [SMM Express]
May 22, 2026 19:36
Rare Earth Export Prices Saw Slight Correction This Week as Geopolitical Tensions and Supply Chain Restructuring Accelerated [SMM Rare Earth Ex-China Weekly Review]
The ex-China rare earth market this week exhibited a trend of "falling prices amid tight supply," with Pr-Nd oxide and metal prices generally marked down by approximately $5-10/kg. However, due to export controls and tightening supply, the premium on Chinese products outside China remained significant. Meanwhile, geopolitical rivalry and supply chain restructuring accelerated, with G7 finance ministers calling for urgent reduction of dependence on China and the establishment of recycling quota systems. On the capital front, Greenland Resources spent $35 million to acquire the high-grade Sarfartoq project to strengthen its magnetic material rare earth portfolio. Australia's Arafura officially finalised the final investment decision for the Nolans project. Combined with Brazil's launch of an antitrust investigation and Germany's Heraeus divesting its recycling business, these developments underscored the urgency of global decoupling and localization efforts.
May 22, 2026 17:07
Terrafame Explores Scandium Recovery in Finland, Aiming for 2029 Production
Finnish metals producer Terrafame launched a pre-feasibility study to evaluate scandium recovery from its nickel and zinc production process at Sotkamo in eastern Finland. The company already produces battery-grade nickel, cobalt, and copper, and recovers uranium as a by-product from the same polymetallic ore. Scandium production would also be extracted from these existing hydrometallurgy circuits. The study is expected to be completed by the end of 2026, with a potential production target of 2029. If successfully developed, the project would make Terrafame the only scandium producer in Europe.
May 22, 2026 09:09
Arafura Commits to Nolan Rare Earth Project, Aiming for 4,440 mt Annual Pr-Nd Oxide Production
[SMM Rare Earth News Flash] Australia's Arafura announced a final investment decision on the Nolan rare earth project, which has an annual output of 4,440 mt of Pr-Nd oxide. Construction, spanning 30 months, will commence in September, with commissioning expected in early to mid-2029. The project will also produce 470 mt per year of mixed medium-heavy rare earth oxides. Following Australian export finance support for 500 mt/year of Pr-Nd oxide, offtake agreements covered over 80% of capacity. The project has a mine life of 38 years and can meet 4% of global Pr-Nd demand.
May 21, 2026 16:13
[SMM Analysis] Q1 2026 Global ESS Shipments: Competitive Landscape Undergoes Fundamental Shifts
[SMM Analysis] Q1 2026 Global ESS Shipments: Competitive Landscape Undergoes Fundamental Shifts
In the first quarter of 2026, global energy storage system shipments reached 100.0 GWh, a 96.5% increase from 50.9 GWh in the same period of 2025, bringing quarterly shipments to an entirely new scale.
May 27, 2026 10:44
Silver: Why the $100 mark is both within reach and dangerous
Silver: Why the $100 mark is both within reach and dangerous
Jun 1, 2026 14:05
Solid-State Battery Monthly (May 2026): Semi-Solid EVs Launch, All-Solid Targets  $0.15/Wh
Solid-State Battery Monthly (May 2026): Semi-Solid EVs Launch, All-Solid Targets  $0.15/Wh
May 30, 2026 21:06
[SMM Analysis] Tata Steel’s Two-Speed Transformation: Record India Earnings Confront Europe’s Green Steel Challenge
[SMM Analysis] Tata Steel’s Two-Speed Transformation: Record India Earnings Confront Europe’s Green Steel Challenge
May 29, 2026 16:20
[SMM Analysis] Why Did High-Grade NPI Fall Despite Tighter Costs? NPI Market May Review and June Outlook
[SMM Analysis] Why Did High-Grade NPI Fall Despite Tighter Costs? NPI Market May Review and June Outlook
Jun 1, 2026 17:41
[SMM Insights] Coking Coal Competitive Landscape Under Energy Crisis
[SMM Insights] Coking Coal Competitive Landscape Under Energy Crisis
Jun 3, 2026 11:39
Off-Season Dragged Down Rare Earth Prices in May, Pr-Nd Oxide and Dysprosium Oxide Saw Significant Declines — How Will the Market Evolve? [SMM Monthly Analysis]
Off-Season Dragged Down Rare Earth Prices in May, Pr-Nd Oxide and Dysprosium Oxide Saw Significant Declines — How Will the Market Evolve? [SMM Monthly Analysis]
Jun 3, 2026 20:09
Latest News
Ramaco's Wyoming Rare Earth Project Shows $1.2B NPV, First US Mine in 70 Years
9 hours ago
Ramaco, REalloys Sign MOU for US Rare Earth and Magnet Supply Chain
9 hours ago
Ultra Rare Metals Acquires Full Ownership of PCH Rare Earth Project in Brazil
9 hours ago
Rare Earth Market Shows Mixed Performance, Tug-of-War Between Upstream and Downstream Continues [SMM Rare Earth Weekly Review]
12 hours ago
USA Rare Earth to Invest $1.2B in South Carolina Magnet and Rare Earth Metal Plant
18 hours ago
European Resources Identifies New Anomalies at Korsnäs Rare Earth Project, Expands Exploration Area
18 hours ago
Solvay Secures Rare Earth Supply Deal with Viridis for European Demand Growth
Jun 3, 2026 13:07
Off-Season Dragged Down Rare Earth Prices in May, Pr-Nd Oxide and Dysprosium Oxide Saw Significant Declines — How Will the Market Evolve? [SMM Monthly Analysis]
Jun 3, 2026 20:09
SMM Launches Rare Earth Evening Price Data for Accurate Market Tracking
Jun 2, 2026 18:26
NdFeB Blank Production Rises in May 2026, Stable Outlook for June
Jun 2, 2026 16:25
US and India Sign Critical Minerals Agreement for Supply Chain Security
Jun 2, 2026 09:34
American Rare Earths Begins 2026 Drilling at Halleck Creek Project in Wyoming
Jun 2, 2026 09:27
Pr-Nd Oxide Prices Show Slight Fluctuations Amid Low Market Confidence and Weak Demand
May 31, 2026 23:10
China's Thorium and Rare Earth Imports Surge, Market Shows "Hot Outside, Cold Inside" Phenomenon
May 31, 2026 22:10
Zimbabwe Strengthened Mineral Controls, Minor Metal Sector Rose Over 3%, Yunnan Germanium Industry, Jin Mo Shares Hit Daily Limit [SMM News Flash]
May 28, 2026 20:30
Rare Earth Prices Fluctuated as Upstream and Downstream Sectors Continued Stalemate [SMM Rare Earth Weekly Review]
May 28, 2026 13:47
Policy Tailwinds Combined with Rising Expectations of Improving Demand, Rare Earth Permanent Magnets Concept Strengthened, Xiangdian Co. Hit Daily Limit [SMM Express]
May 22, 2026 19:36
Rare Earth Export Prices Saw Slight Correction This Week as Geopolitical Tensions and Supply Chain Restructuring Accelerated [SMM Rare Earth Ex-China Weekly Review]
May 22, 2026 17:07
Terrafame Explores Scandium Recovery in Finland, Aiming for 2029 Production
May 22, 2026 09:09
Arafura Commits to Nolan Rare Earth Project, Aiming for 4,440 mt Annual Pr-Nd Oxide Production
May 21, 2026 16:13