Slumping lithium prices signal angst over China’s demand outlook

Lithium prices are spiraling down toward the lowest level in two years on concerns over the strength of Chinese demand for the material, a key ingredient in electric vehicle batteries.

Prices of lithium carbonate in China fell to 166,500 yuan ($36,135) a ton last Wednesday, ahead of the Golden Week holidays, a loss of almost half from the recent peak in early June.

The decline has been precipitous.

Less than a year ago, the metal reached a record of 598,000 yuan a ton.

The slump has hammered lithium producers too, with the Sprott Lithium Miners ETF tumbling to the weakest since its inception in February, and Global X Lithium & Battery Tech ETF plunging to the lowest since 2020.

Demand for lithium typically picks up in the fourth quarter in China — the world’s largest EV market — because of strong battery cell production and installation, and manufacturers usually replenish their feedstock ahead of that. But this year, that hasn’t happened.

Sizable restocking has yet to materialise, said Susan Zou, an analyst with researcher Rystad Energy.

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