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Special: The No. 1 Way to Play the Rare Earth Crisis

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In a typical Chinese rare earth processing plant, more than 200 workers move through a maze of massive chemical tanks to produce the materials that power everything from fighter jets to cellphones.

Hundreds of these facilities operate across China, giving Beijing overwhelming control over one of the most critical choke points in the modern industrial economy.

But now, in Canada, a high-tech facility is beginning to break that monopoly. Built around an AI-enabled operating system, the plant is designed to create a cleaner, more secure processing chain.

And one company has secured rights to the majority of its production.

That company is REalloys (NASDAQ: ALOY).

It operates in the part of the rare earth supply chain that barely exists outside China - the step where strategic independence is actually won or lost.

Digging minerals out of the ground is relatively easy. Turning them into finished metals and alloys for fighter jets, drones, missile guidance systems, and advanced radar is something else entirely.

REalloys operates its own metallization facility in Ohio and holds an operating agreement for up to 80% of production capacity with the Saskatchewan Research Council.

Every critical step happens on North American soil - with no Chinese chemicals, technology, or capital.

When it comes to rare earths, 1% reliance on China is 100% reliance on China.

Western defense production cannot run on a supply chain that can be shut off at any time.

REalloys is building one that can't.

Read the full REalloys (NASDAQ: ALOY) breakdown



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