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August 20, 2025 11 mins

“Neo’s had a very good run, but it’s just the beginning.” Rahim Suleman, the measured President and CEO of Neo Performance Materials Inc. (TSX: NEO | OTCQX: NOPMF), is not a man given to hyperbole. But when the leader of a 30-year-old company that has quietly supplied the building blocks of modern technology suddenly finds his magnets held aloft at the G7 Summit by Ursula von der Leyen and Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, even understatement takes on a charge.Neo is not a story of sudden discovery or speculative frenzy. Headquartered in Toronto, with factories in Germany, Estonia, China, and beyond, the company makes the powders, magnets, alloys, and chemicals that hum inside wind turbines, hybrid vehicles, robotics, and server farms. Its products are both invisible and indispensable. This past year, Neo’s stock rose nearly 169%, the company raised its dividend, and quarterly profits surged 42%. Yet Suleman insists the company’s transformation is only starting. “It’s hard to say it’s just the beginning after 30 years,” he told me, “but I do feel it is really just the beginning of what rare earth magnetics in the Western world is going to look like.”The timing is fortuitous. For decades, rare earth supply chains have been dominated by China. Neo, with its deep technical history and operating scale, now finds itself one of the only firms capable of producing rare earth magnets outside that system. In Estonia, its new sintered magnet plant has begun with capacity for 2,000 tons annually, with plans to expand to 5,000 tons and eventually 20,000 tons. “That was always the intention,” Suleman said, leaning forward. “We’re putting the pedal to the floor because we see more and more good things happening.”Part of what makes Neo unusual is its ability to handle heavy rare earths — the scarce, expensive cousins of the lighter elements that give magnets their staying power. “One to two percent of a magnet is heavy rare earths,” Suleman explained. “It’s small, but it is scarce and it is hard to come by. Neo has a very unique history in the ability to process and separate heavy rare earths — one of the only companies in the world that can do it outside of China.” In Estonia, Neo is constructing a pilot production line for dysprosium and terbium, which could one day become a full commercial facility. “It’s not a lab-scale line,” he added pointedly. “It’s a real line.”Neo has also taken a contrarian path by reducing dependence on those very materials. In partnership with Daido and Honda, it developed the world’s first heavy rare earth–free traction motor for hybrid vehicles. “We are the only company in the world that has this type of technology and product actually on an automotive platform today,” Suleman said. Already in its fourth generation, the motor reflects Neo’s engineering culture: pragmatic, long-view, oriented to execution.Execution has been the watchword of Neo’s recent quarters. In its second-quarter 2025 results, the company reported revenue of $114.7 million and Adjusted EBITDA of $19 million, up sharply from a year earlier, prompting management to raise full-year guidance to as much as $68 million. Volumes at its Magnequench division grew more than 30%, while its Chemicals & Oxides segment doubled EBITDA. The Rare Metals division delivered strong results in hafnium and gallium, niche but critical materials increasingly shaped by geopolitics. “Winning business is no longer the thing that keeps us up at night,” Suleman said. “The phones are ringing off the hook with customers looking for a localized supply chain and a rare earth magnet solution from someone experienced in this business.”

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