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Daily Edge Report Puts (Nasdaq: ALOY) On The Top of Today's Watchlist—Monday, March 30, 2026 |
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(Nasdaq: ALOY) Targets Disruption Of A Fast-Growing $20Bn Rare Earth Magnets Market |
March 30th, 2026
Bell's About to Ring | See Why (ALOY) is Lighting Up Our Watchlist Right Now |
Dear Readers, |
In the race to electrify transportation, harden defense systems, and modernize power grids, a small component sits at the center of it all: rare earth magnets. |
These compact engines of force convert electrical energy into motion in everything from EV drivetrains and drone rotors to radar systems and industrial robots. |
They are the unseen workhorses of the 21st‑century economy, and their performance depends on a handful of critical metals: neodymium (Nd), praseodymium (Pr), dysprosium (Dy), and terbium (Tb). |
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Without these elements, vast downstream industries in defense, technology, and energy simply cannot function. |
It is at this strategic junction that REalloys Inc. (Nasdaq: ALOY) has positioned itself, building a Rare Earth Mine‑to‑Magnet platform in the Western Hemisphere designed to answer both market demand and national security imperatives. |
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A Market Growing Faster Than the Headlines |
Rare earth magnets underpin a market valued at roughly $20Bn annually, with demand shaped by how deeply magnets are embedded across energy, industrial, and defense systems. |
They sit at the core of products and platforms representing $Tn's in downstream value, from global EV fleets to grid‑scale power electronics and advanced weapons systems. |
Under high‑adoption scenarios modeled by Morgan Stanley, demand for rare earth magnets is expected to increase roughly 40–50X over the coming decades as electrification, automation, and defense platforms scale in parallel. |
Even in nearer‑term base and high cases, Morgan Stanley forecasts magnet demand rising roughly 3–5 X over the coming decade, driven by higher magnet intensity in electric vehicles, grid equipment, and defense systems. |
Beyond the coming decade, additional growth is expected as robotics and automation scale, a trajectory examined by Adamas Intelligence in its analysis of NdFeB (neodymium-iron-boron) demand and humanoid robotics. |
Benchmark Mineral Intelligence likewise points to sustained growth in NdFeB magnet demand, with EVs and industrial automation driving near‑term increases and robotics emerging as a longer‑term source of incremental demand. |
A Structural Problem in Rare Earth Supply |
Despite decades of technological progress, rare earth markets remain structurally unbalanced. |
Roughly 90% of global rare earth processing and magnet production is concentrated in China, which dominates separation, refining, and magnet fabrication. |
Pricing and availability are largely anchored there, with export licensing and policy choices acting as gating mechanisms for non‑Chinese buyers. |
In 2026, Western prices for critical heavy rare earth oxides, including dysprosium, terbium, and yttrium, diverged sharply from Chinese levels, with European oxides trading at multiples of domestic Chinese prices. |
China has tightened control over upstream and midstream capabilities by restricting exports of specialized processing technology, equipment, and chemicals, and by implementing end‑use certification rules that effectively block rare earth exports into defense‑related applications. |
REalloys believes that these measures compress the timeline for establishing compliant, non‑Chinese supply and reduce substitution options for downstream users. |
In the United States, this exposure is being addressed through policy: starting in 2027, Department of War sourcing waivers expire, and defense contractors will no longer be permitted to use Chinese‑origin rare earth materials in qualifying systems. |
At the same time, the capital environment has shifted. |
Federal programs including the Restoring American Mineral Dominance framework (IRA manufacturing incentives), the Defense Production Act, and financing through DOE's Loan Programs Office and EXIM are structured to accelerate commercial build‑out of domestic rare earth separation and magnet manufacturing. |
In aggregate, approximately $2.5Bn has been committed by the U.S. government toward rare earth and magnet supply chain investments. |
REalloys Inc. (Nasdaq: ALOY) entry is timed to coincide with this convergence of policy, capital, and demand. |
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REalloys: A Mine‑to‑Magnet Model Built for 2027 |
REalloys Inc. is constructing what it describes as the Western Hemisphere's first fully integrated heavy rare earth Mine‑to‑Magnet platform. |
The company's mission is to establish a sustainable, vertically integrated rare earth ecosystem in North America capable of supplying magnets to defense, clean energy, and electric mobility markets. |
Its platform integrates three core stages of the value chain: |
Upstream: Mining and concentrate production from the Hoidas Lake deposit in Saskatchewan, alongside strategic offtake agreements covering primary mineral concentrates, recycled materials, and non‑conventional sources. Midstream: Separation and metallization in partnership with the Saskatchewan Research Council (SRC). Downstream: Metal alloying and magnet manufacturing at the Euclid, Ohio facility.
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This architecture is designed to convert raw mineral feed into finished rare earth magnets within one continuous North American ecosystem. |
The company's modular expansion model allows it to scale magnet production line by line across the U.S., matching demand growth while maintaining capital discipline and compliance with U.S. and allied sourcing requirements. |
REalloys Phased Buildout Toward Full Midstream Leadership |
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Phase 1 – Early Production with SRC |
The SRC began construction of its Rare Earth Processing Facility (REPF) in 2023, with mechanical completion currently targeted for late 2026 to early 2027. |
The facility was designed from the outset to operate without reliance on Chinese‑origin technology, equipment, controls, or consumables. |
It is configured to process a range of feedstock types, including monazite, bastnasite, and recycled rare earth materials, supported by supply agreements covering the first five years of operation. |
REalloys has agreed to fund upgrades that expand the plant's capacity to approximately 525 tonnes per year of NdPr metal, around 30 tonnes of dysprosium oxide, and 10 tonnes of terbium oxide. |
At that scale, the facility is currently expected to represent the largest source of heavy rare earth oxides outside China, located within North America and positioned to supply U.S. protected markets. |
In return for its in-vest-ment and a prepayment, REalloys has secured 80% of the plant's production under an exclusive offtake arrangement. |
As an extension of the REPF, REalloys and SRC plan to construct a modular heavy rare earth oxide‑to‑metal conversion unit designed to convert dysprosium and terbium oxides into finished metals suitable for high‑temperature and defense‑grade magnet applications. |
The system will be engineered, assembled, and commissioned by SRC in Canada before being relocated to REalloys' Euclid, Ohio facility, leveraging metallization expertise at its wholly owned subsidiary, PMT Critical Metals. |
Production is expected to begin in early 2027 to meet the 2027 U.S. defense sourcing requirement. |
Phase 2 – Scale and Depth |
A feasibility study for a second facility, the "REA REPF," outlines targeted annual production of about 245 tonnes of heavy rare earth metals, roughly 200 tonnes of dysprosium and 45 tonnes of terbium, and 3,000 tonnes of NdPr metal, using similar processing techniques and diversified feedstock, including recycled materials. |
Non‑binding offtake commitments from CRML and St George provide early market support, with additional concentrate expected from REalloys' 100%‑owned Hoidas Lake asset and third‑party suppliers. |
Hoidas Lake, in northern Saskatchewan, hosts measured and indicated resources of roughly 2.2Mn tonnes grading 1.9% TREO and inferred resources of about 1.6 Mn tonnes grading 2.1% TREO. |
Neodymium and praseodymium make up around 27% of total rare earth oxides, with dysprosium and terbium contributing another 0.5%. |
Its proximity to SRC's infrastructure and location in a stable mining jurisdiction make it a credible upstream feedstock within the REalloys supply chain. |
Downstream, the Euclid, Ohio metal and magnet facility would serve as the operational anchor of REalloys' U.S. strategy. |
Developed under PMT Critical Metals and affiliates Powdermet Inc. and Terves LLC, the site is fully compliant with U.S. Department of War sourcing requirements with a strong track record of developing heavy rare earth metals, alloys, and magnets. |
With more than three decades of experience in advanced metal and magnet processing, and capabilities from pyrometallurgy through sintering, grain boundary engineering, and coating, Euclid translates REalloys' upstream and midstream strengths into finished magnet products. |
Technology and Midstream Capability |
In rare earth supply chains, the primary constraint outside China is not mining or separation, but metallization, the oxide‑to‑metal step. |
Through its acquisition of PMT Critical Metals, REalloys controls a heavy rare earth metallization platform in North America, built on more than 30 years of specialty metals work and eight years of focused metallothermic and calciothermic processing with U.S. national laboratories and the Defense Logistics Agency. |
The resulting closed‑cycle process converts dysprosium, terbium, samarium, gadolinium, and mixed rare earth streams into high‑purity metals while reclaiming byproducts and eliminating waste streams that typically constrain scale and permitting. |
By pairing SRC's large‑scale separation infrastructure with PMT's metallization platform and the Euclid magnet facility, REalloys Inc. (Nasdaq: ALOY) secures the most difficult segment of the value chain and establishes a domestic foundation for magnet manufacturing. |
In that context, 5 Potential Catalysts stand out for REalloys Inc. (Nasdaq: ALOY): |
#1. On‑time completion and ramp‑up of SRC's REPF in early 2027. |
#2. Successful commissioning and relocation of the Dy/Tb oxide‑to‑metal conversion unit to Ohio. |
#3. Conversion of non‑binding offtake agreements into long‑term, binding contracts. |
#4. Positive results from the 2026–2027 Hoidas Lake drilling and permitting program. |
$5. Additional U.S. or allied policy actions that further prioritize non‑Chinese rare earth and magnet supply. |
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We're zeroed in on (ALOY) this morning. |
Take a good look at (ALOY) while it's still early, and keep an eye out for our next update, it could be hitting very soon..
Sincerely,
Joel Locke Senior Editor The Daily Edge Report |
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Pursuant to an agreement between GG Media Holdings LLC and LFG Equities Corp, GG Media Holdings LLC has been hired for a period beginning on 03/30/2026 and ending on 03/30/2026 to publicly disseminate information about (ALOY:US) via digital communications. Under this agreement, GG Media Holdings LLC has been paid fifteen thousand USD ("Funds"). These Funds were part of the three hundred thousand USD funds that LFG Equities Corp received from REalloys Inc., the issuer of (ALOY:US). LFG Equities Corp does not own stock in the Issuer but the reader should assume that clients of LFG Equities Corp own shares in the Issuer, which they will liquidate at or near the time you receive this communication and has the potential to hurt share prices. |
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