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| Huahong Rare Earth |
Huahong rare earth output increased sharply in 2025 as stronger demand from new energy vehicles, industrial automation and energy-saving motors lifted China’s rare earth recycling and magnet supply chain. Zhejiang Huahong Technology produced 8,794t of rare earth oxides during the year, up 71% from 2024.
Huahong rare earth output growth was also supported by tighter rare earth supply conditions in China. Stricter government controls on mining, processing and production capacity helped lift prices and encouraged stronger output from qualified oxide and magnet producers.
Huahong rare earth output is strategically important because the company recovers rare earth oxides from neodymium-iron-boron scrap. This recycling route gives China another feedstock source for magnet production at a time when primary supply, mining quotas and scrap availability remain sensitive.
Sales of rare earth oxides rose by 57% to 9,165t in 2025, while inventories increased by 7% to 359t. The figures show that downstream demand remained strong enough to absorb most of the company’s higher oxide output.
NdFeB Scrap Recycling Gains Value Under Tighter Rare Earth Supply
Huahong operates three production bases for NdFeB scrap recycling: Ji’an Xintai, Jishui Jincheng and Jiangxi Wanhong. Together, these sites have 12,000 t/yr of rare earth oxide capacity using neodymium-iron-boron scrap as feedstock.This recycling capacity matters because magnet scrap is becoming a strategic rare earth resource. NdFeB magnets contain neodymium, praseodymium and, in higher-performance grades, heavy rare earths such as dysprosium and terbium.
Recovering these materials from scrap can reduce dependence on mined feedstock and improve supply efficiency. It also supports China’s circular rare earth strategy, especially as demand from electric vehicles, robotics and industrial motors rises.
Market participants said some oxide plants are facing shutdowns or output restrictions because their capacity exceeds government standards. Tighter mining quotas, limited spot availability and higher NdFeB scrap costs have also created pressure in the oxide market.
These conditions favour producers with approved capacity and secure scrap channels. Huahong’s stronger oxide output suggests that recycled feedstock is becoming more important in balancing China’s rare earth supply chain.
The company’s revenue rose by 41% to 7.83bn yuan in 2025, while profit increased by 157% to 204mn yuan. The profit growth shows how higher rare earth prices and stronger magnet demand improved margins across the business.
High-Performance Magnet Demand Drives Capacity Expansion
Huahong’s rare earth magnetic materials output rose by 27% to 15,791t in 2025. Sales increased by 19% to 14,035t, while inventories rose by 29% to 1,042t.The growth reflects rising demand for high-performance magnets in new energy vehicles, industrial robots, automation systems and energy-saving motors. These sectors require magnets with stronger magnetic performance, thermal stability and reliability.
China produced 16.6mn new energy vehicles in 2025, up 29% from a year earlier. NEV sales rose by 28% to 16.5mn units, supporting demand for high-performance NdFeB magnets used in traction motors, pumps, sensors, braking systems and other vehicle components.
Huahong said high-performance NdFeB magnetic materials accounted for around 42% of China’s total magnet output last year. That share is likely to remain important as vehicles become more electrified, automated and motor-intensive.
Industrial robots also supported magnet demand. Global industrial robot output exceeded 600,000 units in 2025, with compound annual growth above 10%. Robotics growth increases demand for compact, efficient and high-torque motor systems.
Huahong plans to start trial operations at the first phase of its Baotou facility in May-June 2026. The first phase will add 10,000 t/yr of high-performance magnet capacity.
Once the first phase comes on line, Huahong’s total high-performance magnet capacity will reach 20,000 t/yr. This positions the company more deeply in the downstream magnet chain, not only in rare earth oxide recycling.
The expansion shows how China’s rare earth industry is moving toward integrated recycling, oxide production and magnet manufacturing. Companies with access to scrap feedstock and downstream magnet capacity may be better positioned as rare earth supply becomes more regulated.
The Metalnomist Commentary
Huahong’s growth shows that rare earth recycling is no longer a secondary supply story. As NEV and robotics demand rises, NdFeB scrap recovery is becoming a strategic feedstock route for China’s high-performance magnet industry.

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