MW These stocks are in play as Trump and China feud over Greenland
By Charlie Garcia
Greenland possesses 39 of the 50 minerals the U.S. has classified as critical to national security
Donald Trump Jr's plane lands in Nuuk, Greenland on a private visit in January 2025.
84% of Greenlanders want independence from Denmark - 85% don't want to become American.
Denmark has poured more than $10 billion into Arctic defense over the past year - including $2 billion in January 2025 for patrol vessels, long-range drones and a military command headquarters in Nuuk, Greenland's capital. Denmark committed another $4 billion last October, plus $4.5 billion for U.S.-made F-35 fighter jets.
Billions of dollars. For an island with 57,000 people. Greeland's entire population could fit in a mid-sized college football stadium, with room for the band, the concessions staff and most of the parking-lot attendants.
Until recently, Copenhagen defended the world's largest island with four aging patrol ships and 12 dog-sled teams.
Now they're buying F-35s, long-range drones and building a military command headquarters in Nuuk. When the Danes start spending money on weapons instead of social programs, something has gone terribly wrong with the world. Or terribly right - if you're invested in defense stocks.
Why does this matter to your investment portfolio? Because Greenland possesses 39 of the 50 minerals the United States has classified as critical to national security.
If that sentence doesn't get your attention, you're not paying attention.
Consider what's happened since Jan. 3. Early that morning, U.S. special forces grabbed now-former Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro from his own capital. Within hours, Katie Miller, the wife of White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller, President Donald Trump's longest-serving senior adviser and the ideological architect of his policy agenda, posted the American flag draped over Greenland with a single word: "SOON."
Katie Miller, the wife of White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller, posted this image on the X social media platform with the word "Soon"
On Monday, Stephen Miller went on CNN and explained the new world order: "We live in a world that is governed by strength, that is governed by force, that is governed by power." When interviewer Jake Tapper asked if military action against Greenland was off the table, Miller scoffed. "Greenland has a population of 30,000 people," he said, halving the actual number. "Nobody's going to fight the United States militarily over the future of Greenland."
Denmark has been preparing for this moment. So has Europe. On Tuesday, a group of seven European leaders issued a joint statement declaring: "Greenland belongs to its people. It is for Denmark and Greenland, and them only, to decide on matters concerning Denmark and Greenland."
In which China declares itself an Arctic power - despite being nowhere near it
China creating a 'Polar Silk Road' is a bit like Kansas declaring itself a coastal state and building a navy.
In 2018, China's State Council announced plans for a "Polar Silk Road" - a shipping corridor across the top of the world. This is a bit like Kansas declaring itself a coastal state and building a navy. Except China has money, patience and a keen interest in any route that doesn't require permission from the U.S. Navy.
The Polar Silk Road is no longer a PowerPoint presentation. In 2025, Chinese container ships completed 14 voyages through the Northern Sea Route along Russia's Arctic coast, up from seven in 2023. The Istanbul Bridge made the first direct China-to-U.K. Arctic transit in 20 days - half the time required via the Suez Canal, with no Houthi rebels.
The route has also become a sanctions-evasion corridor. One hundred sanctioned vessels used Russia's Northern Sea Route last year, up from 13 in 2024. One-third of Arctic shipping traffic now consists of "dark fleet" tankers with spotty insurance, disabled transponders and the maritime equivalent of fake IDs.
An Arctic Ocean sea routes map shows Greenland's strategic importance.
China wants access to the western Arctic without Russian permission slips. That means Greenland.
But the Northern Sea Route hugs Russia's coast, which makes Beijing dependent on Moscow's goodwill. China wants access to the western Arctic without Russian permission slips. That means Greenland.
Beijing has been shopping in Greenland for more than a decade. Airport bids in 2018 - blocked by Denmark. Rare-earth investments - stalled by regulation. Research stations - ongoing and spreading. The pattern is unmistakable: China wants a footprint, and Washington wants to make sure they don't get one.
Project 2025, the Heritage Foundation document that seems to be the Trump administration's domestic- and foreign policy blueprint, identified exactly this problem.
China has declared itself a "near-Arctic state," a phrase Project 2025 delightfully dismisses as "an imaginary term non-existent in international discourse." Beijing is pursuing what it calls a Polar Silk Road. The recommended American response? Open a consulate in Nuuk. Enhance economic ties. Diplomatic engagement.
Then Trump got hold of it.
The distance between "enhance economic ties" and a deputy chief of staff's wife posting "SOON" over a map of Greenland is the distance between a policy paper and a foreign-policy crisis. Danish leaders read Project 2025. They saw Greenland and the Arctic mentioned in the same breath as Venezuela. They watched Maduro get frog-marched onto an American aircraft. Now they're buying F-35s instead of wind turbines, which tells you everything you need to know about how seriously Copenhagen is taking that consulate option.
39 minerals and a whole lot of ice
Greenland's mineral mix reads like a defense contractor's Christmas list.
Greenland's mineral mix reads like a defense contractor's Christmas list.
The Kvanefjeld deposit contains around 1 billion tons of ore at 1.1% rare-earth concentration - one of the largest deposits on Earth - including neodymium and praseodymium for permanent magnets, dysprosium and terbium for high-temperature applications.
These aren't commodities you can substitute with something from Home Depot. Every F-35 requires 920 pounds of rare-earth elements. Every Virginia-class submarine needs 9,200 pounds. China controls 90% of global rare-earth processing, and Beijing has been tightening the screws since April 2025, with October's export controls banning shipments for military end-uses entirely.
Here's where it gets uncomfortable: China's Shenghe Resources (CN:600392) is already the largest shareholder in Kvanefjeld. It bought the stake in 2016, while Washington was busy with other things. The project has been frozen since 2021 by Greenland's uranium mining ban, but the Chinese aren't going anywhere.
The Tanbreez Rare Earth Project nearby holds 5 million tons of rare-earth oxides. The U.S. reportedly lobbied the company in 2024 not to sell to Chinese buyers. Critical Metals Corp. $(CRML)$ is acquiring it instead. Funny how these things work out.
The European Union signed a strategic minerals partnership with Greenland in 2023. The U.K. announced trade negotiations in October 2025. Jeff Bezos, Bill Gates and Michael Bloomberg are funding exploration. When billionaires start buying shovels, there's probably gold in the hills. Or at least neodymium.
Geography is destiny (and destiny is expensive)
Pituffik Space Base on Greenland's northwest coast is America's northernmost military installation, 750 miles above the Arctic Circle. It provides missile defense, space surveillance and satellite communications. More importantly, it sits directly in the path of any Russian or Chinese ballistic missile aimed at the American mainland.
Pull out a globe - not a flat map, a globe. The shortest distance from Moscow to New York runs directly over Greenland. This is why we built the base in 1951 under extreme secrecy, deploying 12,000 workers before anyone knew what we were doing. Strategic geography doesn't change just because the Cold War ended.
Greenland also anchors the GIUK Gap - the Greenland-Iceland-U.K. chokepoint controlling Russian naval access to the Atlantic. Lose Greenland, lose the gap. Lose the gap, and Russian submarines have a clear run at the Eastern Seaboard. This isn't paranoia. It's geometry.
Denmark's defense buildup includes five Arctic-capable vessels, maritime patrol aircraft and enhanced radar systems. Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen has committed to defense spending above 3% of GDP - Denmark's highest level in 50 years. The Eurasia Group says Copenhagen is in "full crisis mode."
When your NATO ally starts treating you like a threat, it's time to recalibrate assumptions.
What this means for your money
Several investment categories merit attention.
Several investment categories merit attention. None of them are guaranteed to work, because nothing is guaranteed except death, taxes and superpowers' interest in rare-earth deposits.
Rare-earth producers benefit from supply-chain diversification. MP Materials (MP) is the only integrated U.S. rare-earth company, and also counts the U.S. Defense Department as a shareholder. Lynas Rare Earths (AU:LYC) is building processing capacity in Texas. Both win if Chinese dominance becomes untenable - which it might or might not, depending on factors neither you nor I control.
Defense contractors gain from Arctic militarization. Denmark's F-35 purchases benefit Lockheed Martin (LMT). Radar systems, surveillance platforms and Arctic-capable hardware represent contracts for both Northrop Grumman $(NOC)$ and Raytheon $(RTX)$. The Pentagon's 2024 Arctic Strategy calls for expanding regional capabilities.
Read: Lockheed and Northrop shares dive as Trump says he'll 'not permit' dividends and buybacks in defense sector
MW These stocks are in play as Trump and China feud over Greenland
By Charlie Garcia
Greenland possesses 39 of the 50 minerals the U.S. has classified as critical to national security
Donald Trump Jr's plane lands in Nuuk, Greenland on a private visit in January 2025.
84% of Greenlanders want independence from Denmark - 85% don't want to become American.
Denmark has poured more than $10 billion into Arctic defense over the past year - including $2 billion in January 2025 for patrol vessels, long-range drones and a military command headquarters in Nuuk, Greenland's capital. Denmark committed another $4 billion last October, plus $4.5 billion for U.S.-made F-35 fighter jets.
Billions of dollars. For an island with 57,000 people. Greeland's entire population could fit in a mid-sized college football stadium, with room for the band, the concessions staff and most of the parking-lot attendants.
Until recently, Copenhagen defended the world's largest island with four aging patrol ships and 12 dog-sled teams.
Now they're buying F-35s, long-range drones and building a military command headquarters in Nuuk. When the Danes start spending money on weapons instead of social programs, something has gone terribly wrong with the world. Or terribly right - if you're invested in defense stocks.
Why does this matter to your investment portfolio? Because Greenland possesses 39 of the 50 minerals the United States has classified as critical to national security.
If that sentence doesn't get your attention, you're not paying attention.
Consider what's happened since Jan. 3. Early that morning, U.S. special forces grabbed now-former Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro from his own capital. Within hours, Katie Miller, the wife of White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller, President Donald Trump's longest-serving senior adviser and the ideological architect of his policy agenda, posted the American flag draped over Greenland with a single word: "SOON."
Katie Miller, the wife of White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller, posted this image on the X social media platform with the word "Soon"
On Monday, Stephen Miller went on CNN and explained the new world order: "We live in a world that is governed by strength, that is governed by force, that is governed by power." When interviewer Jake Tapper asked if military action against Greenland was off the table, Miller scoffed. "Greenland has a population of 30,000 people," he said, halving the actual number. "Nobody's going to fight the United States militarily over the future of Greenland."
Denmark has been preparing for this moment. So has Europe. On Tuesday, a group of seven European leaders issued a joint statement declaring: "Greenland belongs to its people. It is for Denmark and Greenland, and them only, to decide on matters concerning Denmark and Greenland."
In which China declares itself an Arctic power - despite being nowhere near it
China creating a 'Polar Silk Road' is a bit like Kansas declaring itself a coastal state and building a navy.
In 2018, China's State Council announced plans for a "Polar Silk Road" - a shipping corridor across the top of the world. This is a bit like Kansas declaring itself a coastal state and building a navy. Except China has money, patience and a keen interest in any route that doesn't require permission from the U.S. Navy.
The Polar Silk Road is no longer a PowerPoint presentation. In 2025, Chinese container ships completed 14 voyages through the Northern Sea Route along Russia's Arctic coast, up from seven in 2023. The Istanbul Bridge made the first direct China-to-U.K. Arctic transit in 20 days - half the time required via the Suez Canal, with no Houthi rebels.
The route has also become a sanctions-evasion corridor. One hundred sanctioned vessels used Russia's Northern Sea Route last year, up from 13 in 2024. One-third of Arctic shipping traffic now consists of "dark fleet" tankers with spotty insurance, disabled transponders and the maritime equivalent of fake IDs.
An Arctic Ocean sea routes map shows Greenland's strategic importance.
China wants access to the western Arctic without Russian permission slips. That means Greenland.
But the Northern Sea Route hugs Russia's coast, which makes Beijing dependent on Moscow's goodwill. China wants access to the western Arctic without Russian permission slips. That means Greenland.
Beijing has been shopping in Greenland for more than a decade. Airport bids in 2018 - blocked by Denmark. Rare-earth investments - stalled by regulation. Research stations - ongoing and spreading. The pattern is unmistakable: China wants a footprint, and Washington wants to make sure they don't get one.
Project 2025, the Heritage Foundation document that seems to be the Trump administration's domestic- and foreign policy blueprint, identified exactly this problem.
China has declared itself a "near-Arctic state," a phrase Project 2025 delightfully dismisses as "an imaginary term non-existent in international discourse." Beijing is pursuing what it calls a Polar Silk Road. The recommended American response? Open a consulate in Nuuk. Enhance economic ties. Diplomatic engagement.
Then Trump got hold of it.
The distance between "enhance economic ties" and a deputy chief of staff's wife posting "SOON" over a map of Greenland is the distance between a policy paper and a foreign-policy crisis. Danish leaders read Project 2025. They saw Greenland and the Arctic mentioned in the same breath as Venezuela. They watched Maduro get frog-marched onto an American aircraft. Now they're buying F-35s instead of wind turbines, which tells you everything you need to know about how seriously Copenhagen is taking that consulate option.
39 minerals and a whole lot of ice
Greenland's mineral mix reads like a defense contractor's Christmas list.
Greenland's mineral mix reads like a defense contractor's Christmas list.
The Kvanefjeld deposit contains around 1 billion tons of ore at 1.1% rare-earth concentration - one of the largest deposits on Earth - including neodymium and praseodymium for permanent magnets, dysprosium and terbium for high-temperature applications.
These aren't commodities you can substitute with something from Home Depot. Every F-35 requires 920 pounds of rare-earth elements. Every Virginia-class submarine needs 9,200 pounds. China controls 90% of global rare-earth processing, and Beijing has been tightening the screws since April 2025, with October's export controls banning shipments for military end-uses entirely.
Here's where it gets uncomfortable: China's Shenghe Resources (CN:600392) is already the largest shareholder in Kvanefjeld. It bought the stake in 2016, while Washington was busy with other things. The project has been frozen since 2021 by Greenland's uranium mining ban, but the Chinese aren't going anywhere.
The Tanbreez Rare Earth Project nearby holds 5 million tons of rare-earth oxides. The U.S. reportedly lobbied the company in 2024 not to sell to Chinese buyers. Critical Metals Corp. (CRML) is acquiring it instead. Funny how these things work out.
The European Union signed a strategic minerals partnership with Greenland in 2023. The U.K. announced trade negotiations in October 2025. Jeff Bezos, Bill Gates and Michael Bloomberg are funding exploration. When billionaires start buying shovels, there's probably gold in the hills. Or at least neodymium.
Geography is destiny (and destiny is expensive)
Pituffik Space Base on Greenland's northwest coast is America's northernmost military installation, 750 miles above the Arctic Circle. It provides missile defense, space surveillance and satellite communications. More importantly, it sits directly in the path of any Russian or Chinese ballistic missile aimed at the American mainland.
Pull out a globe - not a flat map, a globe. The shortest distance from Moscow to New York runs directly over Greenland. This is why we built the base in 1951 under extreme secrecy, deploying 12,000 workers before anyone knew what we were doing. Strategic geography doesn't change just because the Cold War ended.
Greenland also anchors the GIUK Gap - the Greenland-Iceland-U.K. chokepoint controlling Russian naval access to the Atlantic. Lose Greenland, lose the gap. Lose the gap, and Russian submarines have a clear run at the Eastern Seaboard. This isn't paranoia. It's geometry.
Denmark's defense buildup includes five Arctic-capable vessels, maritime patrol aircraft and enhanced radar systems. Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen has committed to defense spending above 3% of GDP - Denmark's highest level in 50 years. The Eurasia Group says Copenhagen is in "full crisis mode."
When your NATO ally starts treating you like a threat, it's time to recalibrate assumptions.
What this means for your money
Several investment categories merit attention.
Several investment categories merit attention. None of them are guaranteed to work, because nothing is guaranteed except death, taxes and superpowers' interest in rare-earth deposits.
Rare-earth producers benefit from supply-chain diversification. MP Materials (MP) is the only integrated U.S. rare-earth company, and also counts the U.S. Defense Department as a shareholder. Lynas Rare Earths (AU:LYC) is building processing capacity in Texas. Both win if Chinese dominance becomes untenable - which it might or might not, depending on factors neither you nor I control.
Defense contractors gain from Arctic militarization. Denmark's F-35 purchases benefit Lockheed Martin (LMT). Radar systems, surveillance platforms and Arctic-capable hardware represent contracts for both Northrop Grumman (NOC) and Raytheon (RTX). The Pentagon's 2024 Arctic Strategy calls for expanding regional capabilities.
Read: Lockheed and Northrop shares dive as Trump says he'll 'not permit' dividends and buybacks in defense sector
(MORE TO FOLLOW) Dow Jones Newswires
January 10, 2026 12:17 ET (17:17 GMT)
MW These stocks are in play as Trump and China -2-
Greenland resource developers are investment lottery tickets. Critical Metals Corp. (CRML) and Energy Transition Minerals (AU:ETM) each offer direct exposure to Greenland's mineral wealth. They also offer direct exposure to political risk, regulatory uncertainty and the uncomfortable fact that a Harvard University study found that seven of eight proposed Greenland investments have failed.
I hold physical gold (GC00), silver (SI00) and bitcoin (BTCUSD) - assets that benefit from monetary instability and great-power competition without requiring me to predict which specific company wins the Arctic scramble.
Before you call your broker
No major Greenland mine will reach production during this U.S. presidential term, or possibly the next one.
The risks here are real - and they're not the kind Wall Street models well.
No major Greenland mine will reach production during this U.S. presidential term, or possibly the next one. The Harvard study deserves repeating: Seven of eight proposed Greenland investments have failed. The geology is promising. The logistics are brutal. The permitting is Kafkaesque. And the politics are the kind of unpredictable that makes emerging-market investors look relaxed.
Here's the number that should keep dealmakers up at night: 84% of Greenlanders want independence from Denmark. But 85% don't want to become American. They want to be free, just not free in Washington's direction. That's not a population ready to be acquired. It's a population ready to be difficult.
On Jan. 3, the U.S. snatched a dictator from his palace. An influential White House deputy chief of staff then appeared on CNN, outlining a foreign policy "governed by strength, governed by force, governed by power." His wife posted "SOON" over Greenland.
Meanwhile, Denmark is focusing more on defense than it has since the Vikings. And 57,000 people who just wanted to fish and mind their own business are waking up to discover they're sitting on the most valuable real estate since Peter Minuit came upon Manhattan.
Greenland has the minerals America needs, the location it wants and the locals it forgot to ask. That's not an investment thesis. That's the setup for the kind of foreign-policy disaster that gets its own miniseries.
Charlie Garcia is founder and a managing partner of R360, a peer-to-peer organization for individuals and families with a net worth of $100 million or more. He holds positions in gold, silver and bitcoin.
Agree? Disagree? Share your comments with Charlie Garcia at charlie@R360Global.com. Your letter may be published anonymously in the weekly "Dear Charlie" reader mailbag.
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More from Charlie Garcia:
'Trump doctrine' demands the world share riches with the U.S. - Venezuelan oil is the latest bargaining chip
China is using silver as an economic weapon. What that means for investors and prices.
America once had enough silver to meet its needs. But that's been outsourced, too.
-Charlie Garcia
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(END) Dow Jones Newswires
January 10, 2026 12:17 ET (17:17 GMT)
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