JPMorgan critical minerals initiative puts security at the heart of Wall Street capital

JPMorgan launches a $1.5tn security drive, putting critical minerals and rare earth supply at the center of its strategy.
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JPMorgan critical minerals initiative puts security at the heart of Wall Street capital
JPMorgan

JPMorgan critical minerals initiative is putting national security at the center of a $1.5 trillion capital plan. The bank will deploy up to $10bn in equity and venture capital and scale lending to sectors tied to US security and resilience. As a result, the JPMorgan critical minerals initiative directly targets weak links in supply chains, energy systems and strategic technologies.

Critical minerals at the core of JPMorgan’s security push

The JPMorgan critical minerals initiative reflects growing concern over US dependence on foreign supplies. Jamie Dimon warned that the US has become too reliant on “unreliable sources” for critical minerals, products and manufacturing. This warning gained urgency after China tightened export controls on rare earth output, processing and foreign trade. Therefore, JPMorgan is positioning itself as a financial anchor for projects that can reduce this exposure.

The bank plans to steer up to $1.5 trillion over ten years into four priority sectors. These include supply chain and advanced manufacturing, defence and aerospace, energy independence and resilience, and frontier and strategic technologies. Within this framework, the JPMorgan critical minerals initiative will back mining, processing and magnet manufacturing assets that strengthen US control over rare earths and battery metals.

Financing the new critical minerals and magnet ecosystem

JPMorgan is already embedded in flagship US rare earth projects. It advised the US defense department on acquiring a 15pc stake in MP Materials, securing an NdPr offtake agreement with a price floor. It is also financing MP Materials’ second magnet plant, the “10X Facility” in Texas, which aims to close a key gap between ore and finished magnets. These deals show how the JPMorgan critical minerals initiative links public capital, industrial policy and private finance.

Meanwhile, the US Defense Logistics Agency is expanding its strategic stockpile of critical minerals. The DLA has issued tenders and RFIs for minerals where desired stockpile volumes exceed current US production and imports. As a result, projects that can deliver domestic antimony, cobalt, bismuth or high-purity aluminum gain a clearer demand signal. JPMorgan’s capital can then accelerate these projects from concept to bankable reality, tightening the loop between mining, processing and defense needs.

The Metalnomist Commentary

This initiative confirms that critical minerals are no longer a niche ESG theme but a core asset class for security-driven capital. By backing magnets, processing and stockpiles, JPMorgan is effectively underwriting a new industrial architecture around metals. The real question now is whether other global lenders follow, or whether US projects gain a lasting funding advantage in the next decade of resource competition.

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