On July 14, China Northern Rare Earth's stock price rose. As of the close on July 14, it was up 2.18% to 39.83 yuan per share. In market news, China Northern Rare Earth released its semi-annual earnings forecast, showing: Based on preliminary estimates by the company's financial department, net profit attributable to owners of the parent for H1 2026 is expected to be between 1.98 billion and 2.06 billion yuan, representing an increase of 1.05 billion to 1.13 billion yuan compared with the same period last year (as per statutory disclosure data), up 112.74% to 121.33% YoY. Excluding non-recurring items, net profit attributable to owners of the parent for H1 2026 is expected to be between 1.99 billion and 2.07 billion yuan, an increase of 1.093 billion to 1.173 billion yuan YoY, up 121.90% to 130.82%. The main reasons for the expected profit increase in the period are: In H1 2026, the company served the national rare earth resource strategy and fully implemented the requirements for safety control of the rare earth industry chain. Affected by factors such as supply constraints on the raw material side and the release and sustained growth of downstream demand at multiple points, rare earth product prices generally strengthened and consolidated. The company focused on its annual production and operation targets, carried out integrated planning and comprehensive measures, strengthened comprehensive budget management, and worked on cost reduction, quality improvement, and efficiency gains in a coordinated manner. It scientifically organized production scheduling, intensified marketing operations, deepened reform and innovation, and strengthened group management and risk control. The company advanced the deep integration of professional management, lean management, and 5S management to a high standard, promoted key project construction, and accelerated the development of new quality productive forces through management and R&D innovation. With strong value creation capabilities across the industry chain and core competitiveness, the company provided solid support and assurance for achieving good operating results. The company refined the organization and operation of production scientifically, with production volumes of rare earth smelting and separation products, rare earth metal products, and new rare earth materials all reaching historical highs for the same period; the subsidiary Inner Mongolia Northern Rare Earth Magnetic Materials Co., Ltd. achieved operating revenue of approximately 9.5 billion yuan in H1, up about 107% YoY, maintaining growth for three consecutive years; the subsidiary Inner Mongolia Xi'ao Ke Hydrogen Storage Alloy Co., Ltd. officially put its first batch of 1,000 hydrogen-powered two-wheelers into operation in Baotou, with a cumulative safe driving mileage of 170,000 kilometers, demonstrating notable project success. The company persisted in benchmarking against internal and external excellence, tapping into internal potential, and strengthening refined management, leading to significant improvements in multiple economic and technical indicators. Targeted measures were adopted for each business segment: In smelting and separation, the division overcame new cost changes brought by rising prices of raw and auxiliary materials, effectively managed cost fluctuations, scientifically organized production scheduling, and ensured new product supply demands. In rare earth metals, leveraging the concept of lean production as a starting point, digital and intelligent methods were further used to strengthen on-site process operation management, driving new breakthroughs in economic and technical indicators such as quality and material ratios. In new rare earth materials and applications, the segment fully utilized newly added capacity advantages, precisely aligned with client needs, and made new progress in promoting sales through production. Deepening industry chain synergy, the Company solidified the foundation of downstream client cooperation while ensuring stable product supply. The Company closely tracked market demand, strengthened marketing management, optimized sales structure, client credit evaluation, and product account period management, adjusted and shortened account periods by category, secured the fundamental base with long-term agreement orders, and met differentiated market demand through retail. Sales of rare earth metals and magnetic materials rose steadily, achieving full coverage of top-tier magnetic material players; sales of lanthanum-cerium products increased YoY, further digesting historical inventory; sales of polishing materials increased YoY; 5 new equipment items and 20 customized and distinctive new products were developed, continuously expanding product application scenarios. Key project construction advanced efficiently, continuously enhancing intelligence and informatization levels. The first phase of the rare earth green smelting upgrade and transformation project has been put into production, with the entire production line connected; the second phase construction is progressing in an orderly manner. Projects across the industry chain, including mergers and acquisitions, restructuring, joint ventures, cooperation, and capacity expansion and production increase for rare earth metals, magnetic material alloys, magnets, and secondary resource utilization, are accelerating toward implementation. The secondary resource utilization project achieved volume increase and quality and efficiency improvement; the Company accelerated its pace of digital and intelligent transformation, with digitalization and intelligence levels continuously improving. Regarding the 2026 operating plan, China Northern Rare Earth announced in its 2025 annual report: 2026 is the opening year of the 15th Five-Year Plan and a crucial year for the Company to advance high-quality development and accelerate the building of a world-class rare earth leader. The Company will uphold Xi Jinping Thought on Socialism with Chinese Characteristics for a New Era as its guide, take fostering a strong sense of community for the Chinese nation as the main theme, fully implement the spirit of the 20th CPC National Congress and all previous plenary sessions of the 20th CPC Central Committee, and translate into action the important speeches and instructions of General Secretary Xi Jinping on Inner Mongolia and the rare earth industry, as well as the decisions and plans of higher-level authorities such as the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region and Baotou City. Adhering to the general principle of pursuing progress while ensuring stability, the Company will fully, accurately, and comprehensively implement the new development philosophy, bravely shoulder its responsibilities and missions, steadily improve the quality and efficiency of operations, build an industry system covering all elements and categories, promote the deep integration of scientific and technological innovation with industrial innovation, accelerate the pace of deepening reforms, enhance modern governance capabilities, continuously strengthen core functions and enhance core competitiveness, accelerate the realization of a world-class rare earth leader, ensure a good start and solid beginning for the 15th Five-Year Plan, and make new and greater contributions to the construction of the "Two Rare Earth Bases." The main production and operation targets for 2026 (these targets are merely planned objectives, and there is uncertainty as to whether they can ultimately be achieved. They do not constitute a substantive commitment by the Company to investors. Investors and relevant parties should maintain sufficient risk awareness and understand the differences between plans, forecasts, and commitments): achieve operating revenue of 44 billion yuan or more, and total profit of 3.5 billion yuan or more. While achieving operational targets, employee compensation is linked to enterprise economic performance and labor productivity in the same direction. Looking back at the price trend of Pr-Nd oxide in H1, SMM data show that it started the year at 609,000 yuan/mt, then hit a H1 high of 890,000 yuan/mt by the month-end of February, marking a cumulative increase of up to 46.7% from the beginning of the year. The core driver came from the supply side: spot Pr-Nd oxide remained tight, futures surged sharply, suppliers held back from selling amid strong bullish sentiment, and metals enterprises were stockpiling ahead of holidays, all of which pushed prices up rapidly. At the same time, disruptions in Myanmar ore supply, domestic separation plants resuming production slower than expectations, and boosted market sentiment formed a combined effect of "undersupply + bullish holdback." However, during March-April, affected by bearish supply-side news and lackluster demand from end-user traditional sectors, the Pr-Nd oxide price quickly pulled back to around 700,000 yuan/mt. That said, the rise in China Northern Rare Earth's concentrate prices in April, supply support from production halts at separation plants, and the release of export orders under the export control extension window jointly drove prices to rebound slightly. Starting in May, the downstream gradually entered the off-season, and purchasing became more cautious. It was not until late June that the Pr-Nd oxide price was boosted again by factors including the official implementation of the Mineral Resources Law Implementation Regulations, which designates rare earths as strategic minerals, and production cuts at scrap recycling enterprises due to tax invoice issues, rebounding to 7.425 billion yuan/mt on June 30. According to SMM quotes, as of July 14, the average price of Pr-Nd oxide was 762,500 yuan/mt, down 0.33% from the previous trading day. Currently, influenced by the intense tug-of-war between upstream and downstream, the oxide market is experiencing significant price fluctuations, while the metals market is relatively sluggish in terms of inquiries, with suppliers holding their quotes relatively firm and showing no obvious adjustments. In the short term, as some raw ore separation and scrap recycling plants undergo production cuts and suspensions, oxide suppliers' willingness to sell at low prices is weak, which is expected to drive Pr-Nd product prices to drift higher. Recommended reading:
Jul 14, 2026 20:16[SMM Rare Earth Daily Review: Rare Earth Prices Diverge, Tug-of-War Between Upstream and Downstream Continues] Overall, affected by the intense tug-of-war between upstream and downstream, oxide market prices exhibited notable fluctuations, while the metal market, due to slightly sluggish inquiries, saw suppliers’ quotes remain relatively firm without obvious adjustments. In the short term, production cuts or shutdowns at some raw ore separation and scrap recycling plants are expected to weaken oxide suppliers' willingness to sell at low prices, which may push Pr-Nd product prices to drift higher amid consolidation.
Jul 14, 2026 14:02Resource Recycling reported that the secondhand mobile device industry is increasingly adopting AI, device-history tracking, data security and critical mineral recovery. The trend is relevant to e-scrap recycling, including copper and precious metals contained in mobile and IT equipment.
Jul 13, 2026 10:15This week, finished steel rebounded slightly after consolidating at lows, while coking coal and coke showed overall satisfactory performance. At the start of the week, with no significant changes in fundamentals or news, ferrous metals continued to consolidate at lows; in the second half, market rumors emerged that BHP’s union announced a work stoppage action. Expectations of short-term supply tightness from the potential stoppage, combined with rising energy costs due to Middle East conflicts, drove a rebound in iron ore prices, which in turn lifted ferrous metals; online auctions for coking coal showed mixed results...
Jul 10, 2026 18:30The Aluminum Association has urged US policymakers to adopt an "all-of-the-above" strategy by expanding both primary and secondary aluminum production. The association also called for stronger scrap recycling, tighter trade enforcement, improved access to competitive power, tax incentives, and enhanced recycling infrastructure to strengthen domestic supply security and support growing demand across manufacturing, defense and energy sectors.
Jul 9, 2026 17:05[SMM Analysis: H1 2026 PV Glass Market Review and Outlook – Oversupply Weighs on Prices, Pace of Cold Repair-Induced Capacity Rationalization Determines Recovery Room] In H1 2026, the PV glass industry went through a full downward cycle marked by oversupply, weakening demand, prices hitting bottom, industry-wide losses, and accelerated capacity rationalization through cold repairs. China's new installations saw a phased pullback, demand dropped after the export tax rebate adjustment, and the release of previously expanded capacity—these three factors caused the PV glass industry to return to a downward trajectory, with the pace of capacity rationalization accelerating.
Jul 9, 2026 14:19In H1 2026, the aluminum scrap market faced the dual pressures of tightening policies and weak demand, which weighed on production growth. Coupled with falling primary aluminum prices, an early indicator of a "high opening, low ending" pattern for the year had already emerged. 1. Price Difference Between Primary Aluminum and Scrap In H1 2026, the primary-scrap price difference went through four phases: starting at lows, rapidly widening, consolidating at highs, and then sharply narrowing, falling to a multi-year low by end-June. Phase 1: The price difference was at a relatively low level at the start of the year, with the Shanghai machinery aluminum tense scrap spread ranging between 2,267 and 2,690 yuan/mt. Before Chinese New Year, downstream enterprises gradually entered their holiday break, terminal restocking willingness was low, and the market was marked by "prices without substantial trading." Phase 2: After the holiday, scrap yards gradually resumed operations. Coupled with the US-Iran geopolitical conflict driving up primary aluminum prices sharply, A00 aluminum prices surged from around 23,100 yuan/mt to 25,590 yuan/mt. Aluminum scrap followed the uptrend but at a slower pace, causing the primary-scrap price difference to widen passively. On March 12, the Shanghai machinery aluminum tense scrap spread hit its H1 peak of 3,848 yuan/mt, while the aluminum extrusion scrap spread reached 3,338 yuan/mt. Phase 3: Primary aluminum prices pulled back from highs. Scrap aluminum, affected by policy compliance requirements, saw tighter supply of invoiced material and thus declined by a smaller margin, allowing the price difference to gradually narrow from elevated levels. Moreover, during the "Golden March and Silver April" peak season, demand fell short of expectations, and downstream scrap utilization enterprises mainly purchased as needed. Phase 4: In late June, A00 aluminum prices accelerated their decline, but scrap aluminum showed resilience due to cost support from the reverse invoicing policy, resulting in a rapid narrowing of the price difference. As of July 7, the Shanghai machinery aluminum tense scrap spread stood at 2,080 yuan/mt, and the aluminum extrusion scrap spread had narrowed to 1,588 yuan/mt. Some cast aluminum alloy producers had already begun to consider substituting A00 aluminum ingots for scrap. 2. Scrap Yard Inventories and Warehouse Withdrawals At the start of the year, after environmental protection-driven production restrictions were lifted in central China, inventories of wrought aluminum scrap approached saturation. However, downstream enterprises had extremely low willingness to stockpile due to high aluminum prices, and some planned to shut down early. The overall domestic scrap market showed resistance to high prices and a "price without market" situation, with scrap yard withdrawals continuing to decline alongside downstream production cuts. Around the Chinese New Year period, scrap yards and scrap utilization enterprises gradually closed for the holiday. Outbound shipments were completely suspended, with only a small amount of delayed arrivals contributing minor inbound volumes, and market trading activity was nearly frozen. After the holiday, as scrap yards fully resumed operations, the release of supply increased somewhat. Downstream restarts accelerated, and restocking demand was slowly released. However, constrained by the reverse invoicing policy, overall trading remained relatively sluggish, with withdrawals dominated by small, need-based orders. Meanwhile, at high aluminum prices, scrap yards held back from selling, and warehouse inflows rose with climbing scrap production, causing social inventories to shift from destocking to accumulation. Following the crackdown on invoice-related irregularities and the tightening of the reverse invoicing policy, YoY inflows at mainstream yards in some regions declined, and inventories showed a mild buildup trend. In contrast, inventories of aluminum tense scrap actually decreased. Over the same period, downstream sectors entered the traditional consumption off-season. Operating rates at scrap utilization enterprises stayed low, end-user orders lacked momentum, and the procurement pace turned more conservative. 3. Policy Since the "reverse invoicing" policy was rolled out in 2025, its enforcement was continuously tightened in H1 2026, but local implementation standards diverged significantly — regulatory oversight was relatively stringent in Anhui, Jiangxi, Hubei, and other regions. Some provinces saw the cancellation of tax refunds and intensified tax audits. Shandong also saw reports that reverse invoicing would be suspended from July, with the overall tax burden reaching up to 10.5%. This policy environment has directly led to persistently high tax compliance costs in the aluminum scrap recycling segment. Moreover, under the invoice-based economy norms, traders' invoicing quotas generally declined, causing a structural shortage of compliant invoiced scrap cargoes and notably tightening aluminum scrap liquidity. For scrap utilization enterprises, the impact has propagated along a chain of "tighter raw materials/rising costs — production cuts/suspensions — substitution risks": first, rising prices of invoiced raw materials directly pushed up procurement costs; subsequently, many small and medium-sized scrap utilization enterprises in regions such as Anhui, Jiangxi, and Hubei suffered losses and cut or suspended production; ultimately, the price difference between primary metal and scrap narrowed rapidly to historical lows as aluminum scrap held firm while primary aluminum fell, sharply eroding the cost advantage of scrap over primary aluminum. Some cast aluminum alloy enterprises are already considering using A00 aluminum ingots to replace aluminum scrap in production, posing a risk that the market demand base for aluminum scrap could be eroded. 4. Aluminum Scrap Production In terms of total volume, China's cumulative aluminum scrap production in January-June 2026 was 4.2928 million mt, up approximately 11.58% YoY from 3.8472 million mt in the same period of 2025. January production stood at 765,700 mt, surging 48.97% YoY, primarily due to the later Chinese New Year, leading to far more effective production days than the same period last year, coupled with front-load orders caused by the phase-out of auto industry policies. Affected by the Chinese New Year break, February production seasonally pulled back to 541,200 mt, but still grew by 10% YoY. March-April entered the traditional peak season, with production rebounding to 753,400 mt and 781,200 mt, posting YoY growth of 5.14% and 12.81%, respectively. The peak of the season was in April, and capacity release and the pace of work resumption remained normal. However, May production pulled back to 739,300 mt, with YoY growth narrowing to only 4.13%, indicating that the squeeze from the reverse invoicing policy on small and medium-sized scrap utilization enterprises began spreading from isolated cases to a broader scale. This trend accelerated in June, as production further dropped to 712,000 mt, turning negative YoY at -1.4% and down 3.69% MoM from May, making it the only month in H1 with negative YoY growth. The key reasons for the June decline were: the rising compliance costs caused by the reverse invoicing policy had already driven many small and medium-sized scrap utilization enterprises in Anhui, Jiangxi, Hubei, and other areas into losses and production cutbacks, while the price spread between primary metal and scrap narrowed to historical lows, sharply diminishing the cost advantage of aluminum scrap. This dampened collection enthusiasm and caused a supply contraction at the source. Therefore, beneath the surface of "total volume growth but a front-loaded, then decelerating pace" in H1 aluminum scrap production, the reality is that the policy shock is rapidly transmitting from the cost side to the supply side, and the downward pressure on H2 production cannot be underestimated. 5. Aluminum Scrap Imports China’s cumulative aluminum scrap imports from January to May 2026 stood at approximately 849,300 mt, edging down 0.84% YoY from 856,500 mt in the same period of 2025. On the surface, the total volume was almost flat, but the monthly trend showed a pronounced “high-then-low” pattern, and the driving force shifted from ample overseas supply in Q1 to a combination of multiple bearish factors in Q2. Q1 cumulative imports grew 3.9% YoY, with Thailand as the largest source country maintaining steady shipments. At the beginning of the year, relatively ample overseas aluminum scrap supply and active stockpiling by domestic secondary aluminum enterprises together supported the high imports. Entering Q2, the situation took a sharp turn for the worse: April imports were 171,000 mt, down 10.4% YoY, and May imports further dropped to 152,000 mt, down 4.8% YoY and 10.9% MoM, forming a contraction pattern of declining volumes and prices. The bearish factors behind this were multidimensional and mutually reinforcing. First, the US-Iran geopolitical conflict drove LME aluminum prices sharply higher, and overseas spot aluminum scrap prices rose accordingly. The overall landed cost for domestic import traders was significantly higher than domestic aluminum scrap prices, and the persistent inversion of the price spread between Chinese and overseas markets directly dampened procurement enthusiasm. Second, high energy prices in Europe intensified competition among local secondary aluminum enterprises for aluminum scrap raw materials, and shipments to China from traditional source countries such as the UK, Spain, Belgium, and France all pulled back to varying degrees. A more far-reaching impact came from policy tightening in exporting countries: the UAE imposed a four-month temporary ban on aluminum scrap exports starting June 3, and the EU also plans to impose an additional 15% tariff starting September. Both factors tightened the availability of high-quality scrap in the Asian region from both immediate and expected aspects. In addition, aluminum scrap imports typically have a shipping lead time of 1-3 months. The significant reduction in purchases by traders in Q2 will be reflected in landing data in Q3, creating a “lagged impact.” Overall, although the total imports from January to May only edged down slightly, the driving structure has reversed from “stable volumes and rising prices” in Q1 to “declining volumes and prices” in Q2. Moreover, the contraction in overseas supply has only just begun to materialize, and the import outlook for H2 faces greater downward pressure. 6. H2 Outlook The aluminum scrap market is expected to continue consolidating on a subdued note in H2, but with significant bottom support. The price difference between primary metal and scrap has narrowed to a historic low, and the reverse invoicing policy constraint continues to establish a floor for aluminum scrap prices. If primary aluminum prices stabilize and rebound, there is room for a slight recovery in the spread, but the extent is limited; if primary aluminum continues to decline, the substitution effect of aluminum scrap will materialize at a faster pace, putting further pressure on the spread, and an extreme scenario of price inversion between scrap and primary aluminum may even emerge. The reverse invoicing policy is unlikely to see substantive easing in the near term, and the tightness of compliant, invoiced supply is expected to persist. Close attention should be paid to the policy implementation standards in newly joined provinces such as Shandong, changes in local tax inspection intensity, and whether there will be a window for optimizing and adjusting policy details. Overall, the core tension in the aluminum scrap market in H2 remains the tug-of-war between "supply contraction driven by policy tightening" and "consumption weakness caused by sluggish demand." Close attention also needs to be paid to progress in US-Iran negotiations and navigation conditions in the Strait of Hormuz, the pace of aluminum scrap arrivals from outside China and enforcement of the UAE ban, the compliance progress pace of the reverse invoicing policy and differences in local implementation, changes in aluminum ingot inventories, and when the inflection point for secondary aluminum alloy ingot inventory will appear. [Data source statement: Data other than public information is derived from public information, market communication, and SMM's internal database models, processed by SMM for reference only and does not constitute decision-making advice.]
Jul 8, 2026 14:11In June, global scrap tungsten markets diverged. India followed China's tungsten price rally, with active trading and higher prices in mid-June before cooling as China softened. Europe saw low-level consolidation due to high speculative inventories, but prices began to edge up in late June as stocks cleared. China's tungsten market experienced a sharp rebound followed by a pullback, and is expected to consolidate in the near term, while medium-to-long-term fundamentals remain solid.
Jul 3, 2026 18:37[SMM Comment: New National Standard Implementation Combined with Tightening Tax Compliance Accelerates Rare Earth Scrap Recycling Industry from "Chaos" to "Order"] On July 1, GB/T 46992-2025, "Technical specification for classification and comprehensive utilization of recyclable rare earth secondary resources," officially came into effect. The standard systematically classifies rare earth secondary resources into nine major categories for the first time and innovatively designs a three-level "SRRE" coding system. Together with GB/T 23588-2020, "NdFeB production and processing recycled materials," they form a complementary framework—the latter provides detailed technical specifications for the single NdFeB category, while the former offers a management framework covering all categories. Both standards are now in effect simultaneously, marking a new stage of systematic management for rare earth secondary resources.
Jul 2, 2026 19:09SMM, June 30: Pr-Nd oxide prices rose overall in June. The initial upward momentum stemmed mainly from strong market expectations of large-scale production cuts and shutdowns at scrap recycling enterprises—industry participants expected this segment to reduce Pr-Nd oxide output by more than 1,000 mt, and the tight supply sentiment quickly pushed up quotes. However, toward month-end, actual production halts fell short of expectations, while new order growth at metal plants remained slow, limiting downstream acceptance of high-priced raw materials. As actual transaction prices for Pr-Nd oxide climbed to 750,000 yuan/mt, buyers became noticeably hesitant to take orders, weakening the upward momentum. Additionally, new bearish factors emerged, and most industry participants adopted a conservative stance on how high Pr-Nd prices could go, cooling the sentiment of chasing highs. For medium-heavy rare earths, dysprosium oxide and terbium oxide showed strong performance in the first half of the month, mainly because upstream producers significantly reduced their willingness to sell, and low-priced cargoes were quickly absorbed by the market, driving prices sharply higher. But in the second half, orders at downstream metal plants did not improve materially, and metal companies were reluctant to accept high-priced raw materials, leaving buyers and sellers locked in a stalemate. As a result, dysprosium oxide and terbium oxide prices entered a consolidation phase at highs. Although end-use demand orders have not yet shown marked improvement and buyers' purchasing power remains limited overall, the supply side of upstream oxides has indeed contracted—whether through partial production halts in the scrap sector or tighter shipments of medium-heavy rare earths, both provide bottom support for prices. Some industry participants believe that as Q3 approaches, rare earth prices are unlikely to see much downside room after moving past the traditional off-season, and upstream quotations have therefore remained firm. Overall, rare earth oxide prices are expected to hold up moderately in July, but the upside will still be constrained by the pace of demand recovery. The market should closely monitor downstream restocking trends and changes in macro sentiment.
Jun 30, 2026 17:31