China supplied 84.8%–90.4% of India’s permanent magnet imports every year from FY2023 to FY2025, per official trade data cited by The Federal. A six-month suspension of Beijing’s rare earth export controls, agreed at the Xi–Trump Busan summit in October 2025, expires November 10, 2026. India has zero operational domestic refining capacity for the controlled compounds. The clock is running.
HARD DEADLINE — November 10, 2026: The Beijing summit Day 1 (May 13, 2026) concluded without any rare earth volume commitments in the official readout, per Reuters. If no durable framework replaces the Busan agreement, China’s October 2025 controls reimpose automatically on this date.
Rare earths, chips, and tariffs are not independent headlines. They are three pressure points in the same geopolitical supply chain squeeze, hitting Indian stocks, raising production costs, and simultaneously creating one of the clearest investment risk windows in a generation. Here is what each one means for your money and why all three are converging simultaneously in May 2026.
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Rare Earths — China Holds 90% of the Refining Capacity
China controls approximately 60% of global rare earth mining and nearly 90% of the refining and processing required to convert raw ore into usable magnets, per Whalesbook. These are not exotic materials sitting in a laboratory. They are inside every electric vehicle motor, every wind turbine generator, every smartphone, every semiconductor chip, and every missile guidance system.
In April 2025, China imposed export restrictions on rare earth magnets. The impact on India was immediate and specific. Bajaj Auto warned of potential month-long halts in EV production. Ather Energy projected a seven-day hit to factory dispatches. Maruti Suzuki staggered the production of the e-Vitara. Tata Motors and Jaguar Land Rover cited supply chain risks in their annual reports for the first time, per Whalesbook.
China’s 2026 licensing catalogue specifically targets samarium, gadolinium, and lutetium compounds, materials embedded in permanent magnets, medical imaging equipment, and advanced electronics. The suspension of those October 2025 controls was agreed at the Xi–Trump Busan summit until November 10, 2026, per China Briefing.
India is 100% import-dependent for 10 critical minerals and relies on China for over 40% of six others, per SBI Research. Between FY2022–23 and FY2024–25, China accounted for 84.8% to 90.4% of India’s permanent magnet imports by quantity, per official trade data cited by The Federal.
The government’s response is real policy with real funding: a ₹7,280 crore Rare Earth Permanent Magnet Manufacturing Scheme targeting 6,000 tonnes per year of integrated magnet capacity, four dedicated rare earth corridors across Odisha, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh, and Tamil Nadu, and a ₹1,500 crore critical mineral recycling scheme.
But Observer Research Foundation’s Sameer Patil stated plainly: “The real impact of the announcement may take some time to materialise,” placing corridor operationalisation at several years away. Critically, the REPM scheme’s 6,000-tonne target has never been benchmarked publicly against India’s current annual rare earth magnet import volumes, and that gap in official disclosure is itself a risk signal for investors.
Chips—India’s $21 Billion Bet and the 2028 Problem
India’s semiconductor push has attracted $21 billion in commitments across five greenfield projects, per Digitimes Asia. Actual high-volume production, primarily in OSAT (outsourced semiconductor assembly and test), will not begin until 2028 at the earliest. India’s import duty on semiconductors is already zero, so US chip tariffs carry no immediate reciprocal bite, per IESA president Ashok Chandak.
The medium-term exposure is a connection most retail investors have not priced: rare earth elements are embedded directly in semiconductor lithography processes, chip magnets, and advanced sensors. China added holmium, erbium, thulium, europium, and ytterbium to its export control list, elements indispensable in chip manufacturing equipment and AI chip components, per Sourceability. If November 2026 passes without a replacement framework, India’s semiconductor ambitions face a rare earth constraint before a single high-volume fab line comes online.
The Nvidia H200 clearance confirmed at the Trump–Xi summit, approving up to 75,000 chips per firm for Alibaba, Tencent, ByteDance, and JD.com, per Reuters, signals a US–China chip détente that shortens India’s window as an alternative manufacturing hub. If advanced chips flow to China under licence, the 2028 production timeline becomes more urgent, not less.
For Indian investors, the stocks carrying direct exposure are not theoretical. Ventura Securities identified the specific names across both rare earth and semiconductor risks:
Indian Equities: Rare Earth and Semiconductor Exposure by Risk Tier
| Stock | Sector | Nature of Exposure | Risk Tier |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bharat Electronics Limited | Defence | Radar and electronic warfare — direct rare earth magnet input | High |
| Hindustan Aeronautics | Defence | Aircraft components — rare earth-dependent permanent magnets | High |
| Bharat Dynamics | Defence | Missile guidance systems — samarium and gadolinium inputs | High |
| Bajaj Auto | EV | Motor magnets — month-long production halt flagged explicitly | High |
| Ather Energy | EV | Motor magnets — seven-day dispatch loss projected | High |
| Tata Motors / JLR | EV / Auto | Supply chain risk cited in FY2025 annual report | High |
| Tata Electronics | Semiconductor | Supply chain disruption risk across fab pipeline | High |
| Dixon Technologies | EMS / Contract Mfg | Component cost pressure + simultaneous China+1 beneficiary | Medium |
| Syrma SGS Technology | Electronics Mfg | Component supply chain disruption risk | Medium |
| Vedanta | Semiconductor | Semiconductor fab delay risk | Medium |
| HCL Technologies | IT / Chip Design | Chip design project delay risk | Medium |
(Source: Ventura Securities, Whalesbook, company annual reports)
Tariffs — The Six-Month Deadline Nobody Is Talking About
The US–China rare earth suspension expires November 10, 2026. If the Beijing summit fails to produce a durable framework by then, the October 2025 controls will reimpose automatically. That is the hard trade trigger Indian investors need marked in their calendars, and the Day 1 readout from Beijing on May 13 contained no rare earth volume commitments, per Reuters.
The Trump administration’s Section 232 tariffs on copper derivatives are already reshaping metal cost structures for Indian manufacturers. US semiconductor tariffs of 25% or higher on chips, applying uniformly to all exporting nations per the administration’s published schedule, increase costs embedded in smartphones, laptops, EVs, and industrial electronics globally. India is not an exporter, so it avoids the direct hit. But it imports the finished goods and components where those tariff costs are embedded in the price.
The non-obvious angle: tariffs are accelerating India’s China+1 manufacturing opportunity faster than any PLI scheme has achieved. Apple’s shift of iPhone production to India, Foxconn’s expansion, and the broader EMS reorientation are tariff-driven, not incentive-driven. Dixon Technologies, despite sitting on the rare earth risk watchlist, is simultaneously one of the largest direct beneficiaries of this manufacturing shift. Investors holding Dixon are exposed to both forces at once and need to assess which is currently larger in their position sizing.
What Indian Investors Should Watch Before December 2026
Three hard triggers determine outcomes for EV, defence, and semiconductor holdings before year-end. First, whether the Beijing summit produces any rare earth volume commitment before November 10, Day 1 produced none. Second: whether Vedanta and Tata Electronics publish updated production milestone timelines ahead of 2028. Third: whether any of the four rare earth corridor states, Odisha, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh, or Tamil Nadu, announces a commercial-scale refining contract before the suspension expires.
The National Critical Minerals Mission, launched in 2025 with ₹34,300 crore in combined funding, targets self-reliance by 2035. The KABIL framework for overseas mineral acquisition and the Australia–India Critical Minerals Investment Partnership for lithium and cobalt add diplomatic depth. But 2035 is nine years away. The suspension expires in six months.
The stocks in the table above are living in that gap, and none of the named EV manufacturers have disclosed rare earth magnet stockpile levels or buffer timelines publicly. That undisclosed inventory position is the variable that determines whether a November reimposition is a one-week disruption or a months-long production halt.
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FAQ
Q: Which Indian stocks are most at risk from China’s rare earth restrictions?
Bharat Electronics Limited, Hindustan Aeronautics, and Bharat Dynamics carry direct defence-sector exposure; all three depend on permanent magnets for radar, aircraft components, and missile guidance systems. Bajaj Auto, Ather Energy, and Tata Motors have flagged EV production disruptions explicitly, per WhalesBook. Dixon Technologies, Tata Electronics, and Syrma SGS face manufacturing cost and component supply risks. The next material risk event for all names in the table is November 10, 2026, the expiry of China’s suspension of October 2025 export controls, per Ventura Securities.
Q: Does India’s $21 billion semiconductor investment reduce its rare earth dependency?
Not automatically, and not before 2028. India’s committed projects primarily target OSAT, assembly and testing, not foundry fabrication. More critically, semiconductor lithography equipment itself uses rare earth elements now under Chinese export controls: holmium, erbium, and ytterbium are inputs to the machinery used to build chip fabs, per Sourceability. Building Indian semiconductor capacity while remaining 84.8%–90.4% dependent on Chinese rare earth supply for equipment components shifts the dependency upstream rather than eliminating it. The 2028 production timeline arrives before India’s rare earth corridors are operational, meaning the fabs, if completed on schedule, open into the same supply constraint they were designed to escape.
Q: What happens to Indian EV production if China’s rare earth controls reimpose in November 2026?
Under the April 2025 restrictions, before the Busan suspension, Bajaj Auto flagged potential month-long production halts and Ather Energy projected seven-day dispatch losses, per Whalesbook. If controls reimpose on November 10 with no replacement supply in place, those scenarios reactivate. The duration depends entirely on whether EV manufacturers have accumulated rare earth magnet inventory during the suspension window. As of May 2026, none of the named companies, Bajaj Auto, Ather Energy, Maruti Suzuki, Tata Motors, have disclosed stockpile levels or buffer timelines publicly. That undisclosed variable is the difference between a week-long disruption and a quarter-long production halt.
