U.S. Rare Earth Crisis Hits Mainstream Media

 | Mar 24, 2015 02:11AM ET

“We have got to change the dynamic here, in this country, with how we view the importance of minerals to our nation…We can’t move forward until Washington (D.C.) gets out of our way…We don’t want to be sitting in a situation where the Chinese are making all of the decisions as to what we are going to be manufacturing – how, when and where – because they have access to all the critical minerals…We have got them here; we just need the ability to develop them.” - Alaska US Senator Lisa Murkowski

For years I have been writing about the coming US rare earth crisis all over the internet and highlighting the support of an independent US rare earth supply chain. This past Sunday evening in hit the mainstream media with a 60 Minutes piece on the Chinese monopoly of the rare earths and how the rare earth technology which was developed in the US was sent overseas for just pennies. This is a bipartisan issue that must be addressed immediately.

Four weeks ago I sent out a piece entitled, “Heavy Rare Earth Prices Moving Higher Since November 2014 ″ predicting that “Increasing interest may return to this sector as heavy rare earth prices continue to gap higher.”

For the past forty years many of our best technologies were shipped overseas in the search for cheap labor. The cost was our intellectual property. The rare earth market began when the TV entered the American household. Now the rare earths especially the heavies have seen a huge demand increase in the past few years as the smartphones enter almost every pocket and in new military technologies such as guided missiles.

The Chinese have almost complete control of the rare earth market pricing and the recent decline in price may have been to hurt the new producers such as Molycorp (NYSE:MCP) and Lynas (ASX:LYC), which produce mostly the common light rare earths. However, the more critical heavy rare earth prices most notably dysprosium and terbium have been on the rise for months. New sources of heavy rare earths right here in the US should gain notoriety.

The Chinese could ratchet the price much higher as they have done in the past in 2010 when tensions with Japan escalated over disputed territories in the South China Seas. These materials are crucial to some of our most richly valued large cap phone and computer stocks such as Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) and industrial giants like Siemens (NSE:SIEM).

Increasingly these large-cap giants with deep pockets should look to fund new projects which could supply them securely for a reasonable price. However, the mine must have an adequate supply of the most critical rare earths used in permanent magnets most notably dysprosium and terbium.