Companies making rare earth magnets in China have been dealing with tougher export checks since September, industry insiders 0 happened weeks before the government announced broader restrictions on these strategic materials last 1 extra hurdles for magnet manufacturers are raising doubts about China’s 2 in May, Beijing agreed to move faster on exports as part of a deal to ease trade tensions with 3 it appears the country might be doing the opposite, tightening its hold on products that matter for both military equipment and everyday 4 people familiar with the situation told Reuters that getting export permission became noticeably harder starting in 5 are now sending back applications more frequently, asking companies to provide additional details, one insider 6 approval process is taking more time, though most cases still get decided within the official 45-day window set by the commerce ministry, according to the second 7 the level of questioning now mirrors what happened in April, when the trade dispute was at its 8 then, long waits for licenses created magnet shortages that forced some car factories to stop production 9 source would say exactly how much extra time companies are waiting or share specifics about what regulators are 10 requested their names not be used because the topic is sensitive in 11 numbers show sharp decline Numbers released Monday showed that rare earth exports from China fell 31 percent in September.
However, the available information does not break down whether magnets accounted for much of that drop. “It’s not surprising to see lower exports in September as getting a new license became increasingly difficult last month,” one source 12 exports took a sharp dive in April and May but bounced back with growth through June, July and August as reported by 13 for September are expected later this 14 dominates global supply of rare earths , which includes 17 specialized 15 materials go into electric cars, wind power systems, and military radar 16 government keeps tight control through its licensing 17 week’s expansion of those controls angered officials in the United 18 Donald Trump initially threatened new tariffs and counter-restrictions on exports, though he softened his language 19 and European companies rush to deadline for new export rules Since the announcement, foreign customers have been flooding suppliers with questions, trying to rush orders through before the updated rules start on November 8, both sources 20 Dunnett, who leads the EU Chamber of Commerce in China, said the biggest worry for member companies remains the pile-up of applications waiting for 21 business group has watched some members get the green light while others face delays over recent weeks, he added.
“We can’t say that we’ve seen a decrease in the level of anxiety or concern,” Dunnett said. “Some companies have had their wait extended further without any response as to why that is the case.” 22 earth mining stocks surged during Tuesday’s premarket trading, building on significant increases from 23 rally followed President Donald Trump’s warning of potential 100% tariffs on China in response to the country’s restrictive export policies on essential 24 Metals saw the largest gain, jumping over 37% before the market 25 Rare Earth climbed 12%, while MP Materials advanced 8%. Energy Fuels shares increased 11.4%, and NioCorp Developments gained 9%.
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