NEW YORK, July 16 — US rare earths miner MP Materials will go public in a US$1.47 billion (RM6.26 billion) deal by merging with a private-equity backed blank-check company, underscoring Wall Street’s rising interest in efforts to boost production of the strategic minerals.

The listing on the New York Stock Exchange would be the first for a US rare earths company since Molycorp went public a decade ago. Molycorp filed for bankruptcy in 2015 and MP Materials bought California’s Mountain Pass mine and other Molycorp assets in 2017.

The deal, announced yesterday, comes as President Donald Trump pushes to resume domestic production and processing of rare earths, a group of 17 minerals used to build weapons and electronics. China is the world’s largest producer of these minerals and has threatened to stop their export to the United States.

Reviving domestic rare earths production has become a priority in Washington as relations with China have become increasingly frayed and US lawmakers warn of the dangers of relying on a competitor for critical defence components.

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Hedge funds JHL Capital Group and QVT Financial will fold their ownership of MP into the special-purpose acquisition company (SPAC) Fortress Value Acquisition Corp, shares of which gained 9.7 per cent yesterday. Fortress is controlled by Japan’s SoftBank Group Corp

SPACs have been behind some recent high-profile public listings, including electric car maker Fisker, which announced its plans earlier this week.

MP will net about US$489 million from the deal and a separate stock offering for several private investors, including venture capitalist Chamath Palihapitiya and the hedge fund Slate Path Capital, which is a major shareholder in Barrick Gold Corp, the world’s second-largest gold producer.

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MP plans to use the funds to upgrade outdated and mothballed Molycorp-era processing equipment in California.

MP had planned to process 5,000 tonnes per year of the two most common rare earth metals by the end of 2020, though the goal is now by 2022, the company said yesterday.

MP is by far the most advanced player in the US rare earths industry, given no rival project has even broken ground. But the company has to ship more than 50,000 tonnes of concentrated rare earths per year to China for final processing because its California equipment is not operational. Chinese customers account for all of MP’s US$100 million in annual revenue.

Jim Litinsky, MP’s co-chairman, will become chief executive of the new company, which will trade under the stock ticker “MP.” Retired US General Richard Myers, who chaired the Joint Chiefs of Staff during the George W. Bush presidency, will join the company’s board.

It was not immediately clear if China’s Shenghe Resources Holding Co Ltd, which owns 9.9 per cent of MP, would participate in the Fortress deal, though the conversion likely will give Shenghe an equity holding in the newly formed public company. Shenghe did not respond to a request for comment. MP declined to comment.

Reuters reported earlier this year that Shenghe’s stake in MP had prompted concern from scientists at the US Department of Energy’s Critical Materials Institute, the focal point of the US government’s rare earths research and a facility that typically works closely with private industry.

The US Department of Defence awarded funding in late April to MP for a facility to process heavy rare earths, a less-common type of the specialised minerals.

But that decision was put on hold a few days later pending “further research,” according to a Pentagon document seen by Reuters. — Reuters