New 50-50 joint venture in Saudi Arabia to expand global rare-earth supply chains and secure long-term offtake boosts investor outlook
Critical Metals Corp. has agreed to form a fifty-fifty joint venture with Saudi Arabia’s Tariq Abdel Hadi Abdullah Al-Qahtani & Brothers Company to develop and operate a rare-earth elements processing facility in the Kingdom, a strategic move that has prompted an analyst to raise the company’s price target.
Under a non-binding term sheet, the partners will work towards creating a fully integrated mine-to-processing supply chain for rare earths sourced from Critical Metals’ flagship Tanbreez project in southern Greenland, with the facility expected to require up to one point five billion U.S. dollars in investment.
The framework outlines long-term offtake rights for twenty-five percent of Tanbreez’s rare-earth concentrate to supply the Saudi-based plant for the life of the mine, and combined with previously announced agreements, the company says all of the project’s concentrate production is now under long-term commercial contracts.
The processing facility is designed to produce separated rare-earth oxides, metals and downstream products including magnet-grade materials for advanced manufacturing, aerospace and defence applications, addressing a critical need to diversify global supply chains beyond China’s dominant position in processing capacity.
Critical Metals will retain its fifty percent ownership stake on a carried-interest basis and will incur no equity issuance or debt obligations in connection with the venture’s development, a structure that analysts view as de-risking the project’s commercial trajectory.
Finished materials from the facility are intended for delivery to the United States for use in its defence industrial complex, underscoring the partnership’s alignment with strategic allied needs.
Following the announcement of the Saudi venture, Clear Street raised its price target on Critical Metals shares to twenty U.S. dollars from fourteen, reflecting confidence in the company’s strengthened offtake profile and future revenue visibility, even as the stock traded lower on broader market movements.
The joint venture represents a significant step in expanding rare-earth processing infrastructure outside China and positions Critical Metals as a key supplier of materials essential to energy transition and national security markets across allied economies.