The short answer to the OP is: consider the political risk
However, from here
https://www.eevblog.com/forum/chat/china-ban-on-germanium-and-gallium/it looks like nobody is using LEDs
I've been doing business with china for 20-30 years (even used to get whole products made there) and nowadays it is largely a fly-by-night gangster culture. Many firms there don't give a sh*t about anything, are happy to shaft you over, go bust every few years (and then somebody contacts you offering to sell you your property which they stole from the closed factory), they steal your tooling, if they can't steal it they will smash it up, etc.
Before somebody posts the usual comment ("same as the West then") it is actually nothing like the West. People here are not a whole lot more honest but they have a far more limited scope for criminal behaviour without repercussions. If something blows up here, you can go there. If something blows up in china, yeah you get a flight there, get off the plane, meet up with an interpreter, go to some totally obscure address, floor 1234, suite 5678, and there you find... an empty room. You ask around and are told there was never any company there, just one guy who was buying the stuff from ... nobody knows, another building, floor 3455, suite 9876, and they don't know nuffink because they were never told who the customer (you) was.
I buy cables and PCBs from there. On about the 5th PCB company in 10 years. The others did various totally crazy things like destroying €400 tooling after it was not used for 1 year, the one person in 500 who could speak English leaving (people leave every 6-12 months)...
I buy enough cables for 2 years, and consider it good luck if the company is still there for the next batch
If you buy a few hundred k a year, that is quite a lot. You must be making lots of $$$. If they are dirt cheap, buy enough for a few years. I am sitting on a 5-10 year stock of a Hitachi H8; essential for a key product. And out of production for > 10 years.