National Post

Lithium brings record prices

- Yvonne Yue Li

Lithium is having a moment — and record prices won’t deter the flurry of deals for the key battery metal.

A number of acquisitio­ns of lithium miners have been announced in recent months, including a proposed takeover of Canada’s Millennial Lithium Corp. by the world’s largest battery maker. Industry consultant­s, investment bankers and analysts see this as just a taste of things to come, even with skyrocketi­ng prices for the silvery white metal that’s a key ingredient to power electric vehicles.

Lithium carbonate prices in China are at record highs after a nearly fivefold increase in the past year, Bloombergn­ef analysts said in a note. The price of Chinese lithium shipped abroad has also climbed due to tight supply and stable battery demand, though at a slower pace than the domestic surge due to the absence of a spot market, according to the analysts.

The rally comes as a global push for less polluting energy sources that has automakers and battery manufactur­ers racing to secure supplies of so-called future-facing commoditie­s including lithium, copper and nickel. Two Chinese companies sparked a bidding war for Vancouver-based Millennial, which has lithium assets in Argentina, with Contempora­ry Amperex Technology Co. eventually outbidding Ganfeng Lithium Co.

That bidding war “is just a taste of what’s to come,” said Chris Berry of House Mountain Partners, a Washington-based industry consultanc­y.

The type of capital entering the electric-vehicle supply chain is more patient than in past cycles, Berry said.

“It’s not just hedge funds riding momentum,” he said. “These are larger strategic players from both inside and outside the EV supply chain positionin­g amidst the decarboniz­ation thesis.”

Chinese firms have been keen on securing strategic materials in South America in particular as they seek dominance in the EV supply chain. Ganfeng has been on an acquisitio­n spree as the lithium market tightens. The company gobbled up Mexico’s Bacanora Lithium in August. CATL already had stakes in Neo Lithium, whose project is in Argentina.

“We have and will continue to see the Chinese looking to buy lithium,” said Matthew Hind, head of global mining at Bank of Nova Scotia’s investment banking division. “There will also be small-cap consolidat­ion as well as EV companies buying stakes in mines with strategic partners in order to secure supply.”

“In other words, consolidat­ion will be driven by several different players,” Hind said.

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