Lithium Extends Rebound to 2-Month High

2025-10-29 10:57 By Andre Joaquim 1 min. read

Lithium carbonate futures rose to CNY 80,000 per tonne, the highest in two months, on a rebound in the demand outlook.

The Chinese government signaled its latest support to the electric vehicle industry and lithium-rich energy storage systems with compensation mechanisms for power storage infrastructure, doubling EV charging capacity to 180 gigawatts by 2027.

Meanwhile, output of new energy vehicles in China rose by 20.3% annually in September, the highest since the start of the year.

Consequently, industry data showed that lithium inventories for downstream sectors fell for a third straight week.

Still, the backdrop of relatively ample supply held off futures from the one-year high touched August.

Chinese authorities approved reportedly approved reserve reports for the restart of activity in CATL's Jiangxi mine.

The reopening reports countered the surge in lithium prices after CATL was unable to extend mining permits in the hub, which is responsible for around 3% of global supply.



News Stream
Lithium Rises to 1-Month High
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Lithium Falls to 1-Month Low
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Lithium Holds Pullback
Lithium carbonate prices in China were at CNY 155,000 per tonne in March, trading at a narrow range since pulling back from the one-month high of CNY 173,000 earlier this month amid softer demand. Electric vehicle sales by top Chinese manufacturer BYD tanked 40% annually in February, a reversal from the growing trend in the previous months to raise concerns that the Chinese EV market may be slowing. The data magnifies worries that higher energy costs due to war in the Middle East could hamper large manufacturers from building input goods inventories, driving industrial metals to pull back. Still, Chinese supply was also expected to remain muted due to Beijing's anti-involution campaign. Authorities have already canceled 27 mining permits in the lithium hub of Jiangxi, aligned with the earlier suspension of activity in CATL's Jianxiawo lithium mine. Also, Zimbabwe suspended exports of lithium concentrates to put pressure on consumers to set up their refining operations in the country.
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