China lithium rebounds on Chile earthquake, but demand concerns persist

BEIJING (Reuters) – China’s lithium prices rebounded on Friday after a powerful earthquake hit Chile’s major lithium producing region, although growing demand concerns weighed on the metal used in electric vehicle batteries.

The most-traded November lithium carbonate futures on the Guangzhou Futures Exchange rose 2.9% to 89,800 yuan ($12,356.89) per metric ton on Friday, having hit a seven-month low of 86,450 yuan in the previous session.

A 7.3-magnitude earthquake hit northern Chile. The Latin American country holds the world’s largest lithium reserves, 90% of which are in the Atacama desert, close to the epicentre.

The news triggered supply fears, as Chile is a major exporter to China of lithium chemicals.

That pared some losses earlier this week as investors raised bets that Donald Trump will win the U.S. presidential election in November. The republican has vowed to undo much of President Joe Biden’s work to fight climate change, including rules promoting electric vehicles.

“A less-EV-favored Trump administration added to demand concerns, given the already much lower-than-expected EVs sales in the U.S. and Europe this year,” Zhang Yuan, an analyst at CITIC Futures, said on Friday.

In Europe, monthly sales for fully electric and plug-in hybrid vehicles fell 7% in June, according to market research firm Rho Motion, while the monthly sales in the U.S. and Canada grew 6%.

Macquarie analysts said in a note last month that EV sales growth in China, the main industry driver, will slow from 30.2% last year to 24.6% this year.

Surging supplies are also weighing on the market. China produced 303,200 tons of lithium carbonate in the first half, up 57.4% from the same period a year earlier, Mysteel data showed.

“Better lithium carbonate prices since March encouraged production. However, producers could curb output as recent price falls squeezed their margins. August is likely to see a decline in output,” said Zhang.

Growing surplus drove down prices which had hit an all-time peak in November 2022.

In its latest forecast, CRU expects a global surplus of 90,000 tons of lithium carbonate equivalent for this year.

Citing falling lithium product prices, Chinese producers Ganfeng Lithium and Tianqi Lithium last week warned of losses for the first half of this year.

($1 = 7.2672 Chinese yuan renminbi)

This post is originally published on INVESTING.

  • Related Posts

    Russia’s claim of emissions in annexed Ukraine regions draws protests at COP29

    By Valerie Volcovici BAKU, Azerbaijan (Reuters) – Russia has included the territories it occupies in Ukraine in its recent greenhouse gas inventory report to the United Nations, drawing protests from…

    Oil prices settle up 1% at 2-week high as Ukraine war intensifies

    By Scott DiSavino (Reuters) -Oil prices climbed about 1% to a two-week high on Friday as the intensifying war in Ukraine this week boosted the market’s geopolitical risk premium. Brent…

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    You Missed

    Russia’s claim of emissions in annexed Ukraine regions draws protests at COP29

    • November 23, 2024
    Russia’s claim of emissions in annexed Ukraine regions draws protests at COP29

    Weekly Brief: My Forex Funds Negotiating with CFTC?, Bitcoin Nears $100K, and More

    • November 23, 2024
    Weekly Brief: My Forex Funds Negotiating with CFTC?, Bitcoin Nears $100K, and More

    Oil prices settle up 1% at 2-week high as Ukraine war intensifies

    • November 22, 2024
    Oil prices settle up 1% at 2-week high as Ukraine war intensifies

    COP29 climate summit overruns as $250 billion draft deal stalls

    • November 22, 2024
    COP29 climate summit overruns as $250 billion draft deal stalls

    SEC Fines Webull, Two Broker-Dealers for Compliance Failures

    • November 22, 2024
    SEC Fines Webull, Two Broker-Dealers for Compliance Failures

    SEC Fines Webull, Two Brokers-Dealers for Compliance Failures

    • November 22, 2024
    SEC Fines Webull, Two Brokers-Dealers for Compliance Failures