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PDAC 2016: How lithium has become a rare winner amid the commodity slaughter

As Tesla Motors Inc. and other automakers ramp up electric vehicle production in the coming years, demand for lithium batteries is certain to rise.

The commodity slaughter from the last five years has left almost no metal unscathed. Almost.

There is really a notable exception. Little-known lithium has been a solid performer during the last many years, and has simply skyrocketed recently because of expectations of soaring demand from electric vehicles and market distortions in China.

“You could argue it’s done much better than anything,” said Jon Hykawy, president of Stormcrow Capital Ltd., which tracks the lithium market. Having said that, he noted the sky-high prices coming out of China don’t tell the whole story.

The lithium marketplace is tiny in the grand scheme of things, with total need for roughly 180,000 to 200,000 tonnes a year. It’s not an exchange-traded commodity, and is instead sold in direct contracts between suppliers and users.

But it is a space investors have been watching closely for a long time because of its crucial use in batteries, designed for planet. As Tesla Motors Inc. along with other automakers ramp up electric vehicle production in the future years, demand for lithium batteries is for certain to rise. Goldman Sachs called it the “new gasoline.”

That is reflected in the prices. Battery-grade lithium carbonate, which sold for about US$5,800 a tonne in 2011, was opting for US$6,880 at the end of 2013 and around US$8,000 today. That performance looks incredible when matched up against nickel or aluminum.

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