Directors of rare earth mining giant Molycorp put their money where 
their mouths are last week, snapping up stock in the NYSE-listed 
company. The insider buying, which involved President and CEO Mark 
Smith, EVP and General Counsel John Ashburn and Director Charles Henry, 
follows August’s punchy $25m stock purchase by Chairman of the Board 
Ross Bhappu.
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London Commodity Markets - The need to rapidly increase production
Rare earths light homes and superdomes, freeway signs and cigarettes. They  play multiple roles in phones, computers, windmills and cars.  They ease the pain of cancers in the bone, and they're sometimes the treatment  itself. They can betray infinitesimal clots in the smallest arteries, and, as  independent of morality as Prometheus' flame, guide Hellfire missiles to their  ultimate, deadly end.
China's rare earth elements export restrictions are helping form new alliances
China's restriction of global access to its deposits of rare earth 
elements starting in 2010 changed the status of these materials in the 
global economy, creating new diplomatic alliances across Asia and 
increasing the importance of mining in trade agreements.
New Company aims to extract Rare Earth Metals from Coal Fly Ash
Neumann Systems Group has another plan to make coal-fired power plants more environmentally friendly.
In the end, that plan could equal 250 high-tech jobs, $400 million in construction projects and $150 million in sales.
In the end, that plan could equal 250 high-tech jobs, $400 million in construction projects and $150 million in sales.
Old airplanes find an afterlife as recycled rare earth metal resource
Aircraft
 makers are increasingly turning to retired airplanes as a source of 
metals and other materials that can be recycled, possibly to fly again 
in new generations of aircraft.
Japan aims for half of rare earth metals supplies from outside China
London Commodity Markets takes a closer look at China
Although the geographical size of China 
is perhaps not that difficult for North Americans to appreciate, their 
population is another matter. As China has become the second-largest 
economy in the world, it is without question transformed into an 
enormous force in the world’s commodity markets;
 so much so, in fact, that the recent commodity supercycle is now 
generally seen as a byproduct of China’s emergence.
 

