Last Updated -

May 30, 2026

MP Materials

Company Profile and Market Insights

Explore the business model, global strategy, and market performance including insights into its position in China.

MP Materials
Key facts
Founded 2017 • NYSE: MP • Q1 2026 results (Mar 31, 2026 quarter)
$90.6m
Q1 2026 revenue
$36.6m
Q1 2026 adjusted EBITDA
$8.0m
Q1 2026 net loss
917 MT
Q1 2026 NdPr production
1,006 MT
Q1 2026 NdPr sales volume
$1.738b
Cash, cash equivalents & short-term investments (Mar 31, 2026)

About

MP Materials Corp. is a U.S. rare earth materials and magnetics company founded in 2017 and headquartered in Las Vegas, Nevada. Its business is centered on the Mountain Pass mine and processing facility in California, one of the world’s richest rare earth deposits and the only scaled operational rare earth mine and separations platform in the United States according to company disclosures. The company produces rare earth materials, primarily NdPr oxide and metal, which are inputs for high-strength permanent magnets used in electric vehicles, wind energy, robotics, defense, aerospace, consumer electronics, and other advanced technologies.

MP Materials has developed from a rare earth concentrate producer into a vertically integrated supply-chain company. Its strategy is to mine and process ore at Mountain Pass, separate rare earth elements, convert material into metals and alloys, and manufacture magnetic precursor products and finished magnets at U.S. facilities, including the Independence facility in Fort Worth, Texas. The company ceased third-party rare earth concentrate sales in July 2025, marking a shift away from concentrate exports and toward separated products and magnetics. Its strategic purpose is to build a domestic alternative to China-centered rare earth processing and magnet supply chains.

In Q1 2026, MP Materials reported revenue of $90.6 million, up 49% year over year, plus $42.3 million of price protection agreement income. Net loss improved to $8.0 million from $22.6 million a year earlier, while adjusted EBITDA was $36.6 million. NdPr production reached 917 metric tons, up 63%, and NdPr sales volume reached 1,006 metric tons, up 117%, both company records. At March 31, 2026, the company held $1.738 billion in cash, cash equivalents, and short-term investments, supporting capital-intensive expansion into separation, heavy rare earth capabilities, metallization, and magnet manufacturing.

MP Materials

Business Model and Market Position

MP Materials makes money by producing and selling rare earth materials, with a growing downstream business in magnetic precursor products and planned finished magnet production. Its core asset is the Mountain Pass mine and processing facility in California, supported by the Independence magnetics facility in Fort Worth, Texas. The company’s strategy is vertical integration across mining, separation, metallization and magnet manufacturing.

In Q1 2026, revenue was $90.6 million, up 49% year over year. The company also recorded $42.3 million of price protection agreement income, bringing revenue plus PPA income to $132.9 million. Adjusted EBITDA was $36.6 million, compared with negative $2.7 million a year earlier, while GAAP net loss improved to $8.0 million.

  1. Materials: This is the main revenue stream and includes separated rare earth products, primarily NdPr oxide and metal. Q1 2026 Materials Segment revenue was $72.2 million, plus $42.3 million of PPA income. NdPr oxide and metal accounted for $71.1 million of segment revenue.
  2. Magnetics: This segment sells magnetic precursor products and is being scaled toward finished rare earth magnet production. Q1 2026 Magnetics Segment revenue was $21.1 million, up from $5.2 million in Q1 2025, with adjusted EBITDA of $9.6 million.
  3. Legacy concentrate sales: MP historically sold rare earth concentrate to third-party processors, including China-linked channels. This is no longer a meaningful revenue stream because the company ceased all third-party REO concentrate sales in July 2025. Q1 2026 rare earth concentrate revenue was zero.

The company’s key products are NdPr oxide, NdPr metal, rare earth magnetic precursor products and, over time, finished NdFeB permanent magnets. These materials are used in high-strength permanent magnets for electric vehicles, robotics, wind power, defense, aerospace, consumer electronics and other advanced technologies.

MP’s competitive advantage is its control of a U.S. rare earth resource combined with downstream processing and magnetics capacity. Mountain Pass is one of the world’s richest rare earth deposits and, according to company disclosures, the only scaled operational rare earth mine and separations platform in the United States. This gives MP a differentiated position in a market where most processing and magnet manufacturing capacity is centered in China.

The business is capital intensive. At March 31, 2026, MP had $1.434 billion of net property, plant and equipment, reflecting investment in separated products, metallization and magnetics. It also held $1.738 billion of cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments, giving it liquidity to support expansion.

MP’s market position strengthened in 2025 through a major U.S. government public-private partnership, an Apple agreement for U.S.-made rare earth magnets and recycling, and continuing General Motors-related magnetics commercialization. The U.S. government price protection agreement reduces some downside when benchmark NdPr prices fall below the protected level, although MP still has material exposure to rare earth price cycles.

Direct competitors include Chinese rare earth miners, separators and magnet manufacturers, along with global producers that participate in mining, separation or magnet supply. The most relevant comparison is to China’s rare earth industry rather than a single U.S. peer. Chinese producers remain much larger across mining, separation and magnet output, while MP’s position is differentiated by its U.S. location, integrated strategy and strategic customer base.

China is no longer material as a direct revenue market in the latest reported quarter, but it remains central to MP’s competitive environment. China’s dominance affects benchmark pricing, export-control risk, supply-chain decisions and customer demand for non-China supply. MP is best understood as a U.S.-based alternative supply-chain company rather than a China-dependent concentrate exporter.

The company’s market position is strong within the U.S. rare earth supply chain, but it remains small relative to China-centered global capacity. Future growth depends on ramping separated NdPr output, commissioning heavy rare earth separation, scaling Independence, building the 10X magnetics facility and qualifying products for large customers such as Apple, General Motors and government-linked programs.

MP Materials

Performance in China

China is no longer a meaningful direct revenue market for MP Materials. The company historically sold rare earth concentrate into Chinese-linked processing channels, including Shenghe-related routes, but that exposure has been reduced as MP built U.S. separation and magnetics capacity. In Q1 2026, rare earth concentrate revenue was zero, and MP had already ceased all third-party REO concentrate sales in July 2025. The company’s current strategy is centered on U.S. vertical integration at Mountain Pass in California and the Independence magnetics facility in Texas, with 10X magnetics expansion under way. China remains strategically important because it dominates global rare earth separation and magnet production, shaping benchmark prices, competition, export-control risk and customer demand for non-China supply. MP’s main competitors are entrenched Chinese processors and magnet makers, while its key partners include the U.S. government, Apple and General Motors.

Growth and Future Prospects

MP Materials reached an important operating turning point in Q1 2026. Revenue rose 49% year over year to $90.6 million, while price protection agreement income added $42.3 million. The company still reported a GAAP net loss of $8.0 million, but adjusted EBITDA improved to $36.6 million from negative $2.7 million a year earlier. The shift away from third-party rare earth concentrate sales, which ceased in July 2025, is now visible in the numbers: Q1 2026 rare earth concentrate revenue was zero, while NdPr oxide and metal revenue dominated the Materials Segment.

Key growth drivers

  1. NdPr separation ramp: Q1 2026 NdPr production rose 63% year over year to 917 metric tons, and NdPr sales volume more than doubled to 1,006 metric tons. Higher separated-product output is central to MP’s move up the rare earth value chain.
  2. Magnetics expansion: The Magnetics Segment generated $21.1 million of Q1 2026 revenue, up from $5.2 million a year earlier, with adjusted EBITDA of $9.6 million. The Independence facility in Texas is the platform for magnetic precursor output and future commercial magnet production.
  3. 10X facility and downstream scale: MP has broken ground on the 10X magnetics facility, which is intended to expand U.S. rare earth magnet capacity. This is a major execution project and a key part of the company’s vertical integration strategy.
  4. Strategic customer and government support: Apple’s $500 million long-term magnet and recycling agreement, GM-related commercialization, and U.S. government price protection, offtake support and funding strengthen demand visibility. They also make MP more central to U.S. rare earth supply-chain policy.
  5. Product expansion: Heavy rare earth separation commissioning at Mountain Pass is set to broaden the product suite and increase strategic relevance in high-performance magnet supply chains.

Challenges ahead

  1. Execution risk: MP is scaling separation, heavy rare earth processing, metallization, magnetic precursor production and finished magnets at the same time. Delays, qualification issues or cost overruns would affect the growth case.
  2. Price exposure: Price protection reduces some downside when benchmark NdPr prices are weak, but commodity-price volatility remains material.
  3. Policy dependence: Government agreements and support are central to the current plan, creating exposure to appropriations, policy changes and contract terms.
  4. Customer concentration: Apple, GM and government-linked offtake arrangements improve visibility, but they increase dependence on large counterparties and strict performance requirements.
  5. China-related pressure: China is no longer a meaningful direct revenue market for MP, but Chinese processors and magnet makers still influence pricing, competition, export controls and customer demand for non-China supply.

MP’s outlook is stronger than it was during the concentrate-export phase, because growth now depends more on separated products, magnets and strategic U.S. supply-chain demand. The balance sheet also provides flexibility, with $1.738 billion of cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments at March 31, 2026. The investment case still depends on converting capital-intensive projects into durable earnings and cash flow. Positive adjusted EBITDA in Q1 2026 was encouraging, but GAAP profitability, magnet qualification, facility ramp timing and cash conversion remain the key measures to watch.

This Company Profile was written by Dominik Diemer

Dominik Diemer blends an investor mindset with execution discipline.

He is a SAFe Program Consultant (SPC) and Lean Portfolio Management (LPM) practitioner at DMG MORI Digital, working as a SAFe Release Train Engineer and internal consultant in the Lean-Agile Center of Excellence (LACE).

His focus is prioritization, flow, and dependency management that turns strategy into outcomes. With experience across Bertelsmann and the Founders Foundation, he bridges corporate and startup thinking.

He also invests privately in private equity deals, sharpening his view on business models, value drivers, and go-to-market.

StockCounterParts reflects that lens.