How To Play The Comeback in Lithium

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The long-suffering lithium sector is enjoying a rare boom after mining giant Rio Tinto Group (NYSE:RIO) announced an all-cash $6.7 billion deal for Arcadium Lithium Plc (NYSE:ALTM), good for a hefty 90% premium to the Oct. 4 closing price. Both company boards unanimously approved the merger, with the deal expected to close mid-2025. Arcadium Lithium was formed in January 2024 following the US$10.6 billion merger of equals between U.S.-based Livent and Australia’s Alkem. 

Arcadium Lithium’s shares have nearly doubled since the merger was announced; Albemarle Corp. (NYSE:ALB), the world’s largest lithium producer, gained 9.4%, SQM (NYSE: SQM) went up 7.9%%, Standard Lithium (TSXV: SLI, NYSE: SLI) gained 39.2% while Lithium Americas Corp. (TSX: LAC, NYSE:LAC) was up 6.7%.

The acquisition is seen as a major win for Rio Tinto, with the company having struggled to get traction in the lithium market after its Jadar project in Serbia ran into local opposition. This means that Rio Tinto now owns the world’s third-largest lithium reserves, behind only Corporacion Minera de Bolivia, also known as COMIBOL, and SQM.

But it’s Albemarle that the markets will be looking at much more closely now. Its strong Q2 performance was impressive, given the extremely fragile nature of the lithium market. Despite these conditions, ALB managed to increase lithium sales volumes and the outlook has been highly optimistic, with ALB forecasting $15-per-kilogram prices. Under pressure from falling lithium prices, a weakening EV market and Chinese oversupply, ALB has taken a beating, shedding 45% year-to-date. That makes this stock a potential buy-on-the-dip opportunity, particularly in the wake of the Rio Tinto developments.

We could be in the middle of a lithium turning point here, and if that is the case, Albemarle has its ducks lined up in a neat row.

Turning Point

That said, the broad-based lithium rally kicked in well before the Rio Tinto merger. The Global X Lithium & Battery Tech ETF (NYSEARCA:LIT) has jumped nearly 30% after sinking to a 3-year low exactly 30 days ago.

The rebound coincides with growing predictions that lithium prices could have bottomed out. A month ago, Citi analysts raised their near-term price target for lithium carbonate to $14K/metric ton and for lithium hydroxide to $14.2K/ton, from a prior forecast of $10K/ton for both products, predicting a near-term rally in lithium prices as investors cover their short positions. However, Citi  added that over the next 6-12 months "does not expect the rally to have 'follow through' as higher prices could very well trigger a supply response, potentially leading to loosening of lithium balances."