The prices of most lithium minerals are down nearly 90% since 2022, as a glut of supply has hit the market at the same time demand growth from the EV industry has slowed. Many analysts have been trying to calculate the point at which lithium minerals producers respond to prevailing lower prices by reducing their supply, and therefore potentially rebalancing the market and prices.
Despite the price of lithium carbonate falling back to near-pre-bull market levels, so far, the supply response has been limited. In their latest lithium industry research report, major broker Citi has posed some serious questions regarding supplier cost bases and supply intentions.
By Citi’s calculations, every Australian hard rock (spodumene) mine, apart from Western Australia’s massive Greenbushes, is operating at a loss. Further, the broker questions whether supply cuts are being prevented by faulty management team thinking. Let’s investigate the reasons for Citi’s claims, as well as the real cost of producing lithium in Australia – how many miners are losing money at the current price?
Citi notes that unlike other commodity mining sectors like gold, there’s “no industry standard for reporting costs” in the lithium sector. Gold miners work out their costs based upon the concept of “All-in Sustaining Cost” (“AISC”). The World Gold Council describes AISC as the “full cost of keeping the mine in business”.
In the lithium industry, producers typically report “cash costs”, and they may also report free on board (“FOB”) costs which add in the cost of loading ore onto a transport vessel. The main issue, contends Citi, is that there are subtle variations in what each producer considers valid cash costs, as well as a pervasive lack of reporting of sustaining costs. This means the concept of an all-in-sustaining cost in the lithium industry simply doesn’t exist.
ASX Lithium Miners Production Costs (C1 FOB):
Arcadium Lithium (LTM) (Q4 FY24 based on an AFR article, 7 August)
Mt Cattlin (Q4 FY24) approx. US$700/t
IGO (IGO) (Q4 FY24)
Greenbushes: A$338/t (i.e., approx. US$220/t at AUD/USD 0.65)
Liontown Resources (LTR) (Forecast in Project Update, September 2023)
Kathleen Valley: A$651/t (i.e. approx. US$423/t at AUD/USD 0.65)
Mineral Resources (MIN) (FY25 guidance)
Bald Hill, Wodgina: A$800-$890/t (i.e. approx. US$520-$578/t at AUD/USD 0.65)
Mt Marion: A$870-$970/t. (i.e., approx. US$565-$630/t at AUD/USD 0.65)
Pilbara Minerals (PLS) (Q4 FY24)
Pilgangoora: US$390/t
Citi says their methodology for calculating the AISC of Australian lithium takes into account the cash costs regularly reported by local producers, as well as:
Royalties
Port access and freight
Sustaining capital used for regular mining costs like waste stripping, maintaining and replacing equipment and infrastructure
Project or growth capital (e.g. costs of new infrastructure or expansions)
The above mine cost schedule adds “Freight / Royalties / Sustaining Capex” to producers’ typically reported cash FOB costs (“C1 FOB”). Citi notes that the above chart accounts for around 35% of global lithium minerals supply.
It is clear from Figure 1 that at the dashed line, that is, at Citi's stated current spot price of spodumene of US$750/t for 6% grade spodumene concentrate (“SC6”), all major Australian lithium mines apart from IGO’s 25% owned Greenbushes mine are presently operating at a loss. (Note the most recent print for S&P Global Platts Australian SC6 price is US$720/t, some US$30 below Citi’s proposed spot price – and the trend is very much set to the downside, see chart below).
In reality, notes Citi, “break-even costs are higher when costs such as exploration, corporate overheads, financing charges etc are included”. Figure 2, below, adds these in. It points to an even greater deficit between current producer costs and the current spodumene spot price.
Figure 2 equates to Citi’s best estimate for AISCs across the major Australian lithium producers. The broker notes that after accounting for growth capex, its coverage is “break-even to loss-making on spot spodumene of US$740-780/t”. This statement suggests that if prices remain as low as they are for a prolonged period of time, Aussie lithium miners could start to report substantial losses.
Looking abroad, Citi notes that other parts of the lithium minerals supply chain are yet to reach their tipping point, noting that several brine operations are still profitable. Citi cites Gangfeng’s Cauchari joint venture in Argentina as one example, as well as other projects Sociedad Quimica y Minr de Chile (SQM) is currently scaling up. This may be part of the explanation for a lack of supply-side response to lower prices.
Looking to China, Citi notes that some converters have reduced utilisation. The term "converters" refers to companies involved in processing lithium minerals into precursors for the electric battery industry. Converters have continued producing nearly unabated because while the costs of the converted minerals they sell such as lithium carbonate and lithium hydroxide have fallen – so too has the price of their major input – spodumene. This means margins at converters haven’t yet declined to a point that is disincentivising further production.
The other key part of the Chinese lithium minerals supply equation is supply from high-cost, low grade lepidolite producers. Citi's China Battery Materials Team has reported that so far, the lepidolite industry is yet to implement “material” cuts. China’s lithium minerals production is down just 10% (around 80 kt annualised) says Citi.
Citi offers another reason why supply at Australian spodumene producers is yet to meaningfully scale back in response to present sliver-like margins. “Long-term consensus spodumene pricing is US$1500/t”, the broker notes. By this, the broker is referring to many producers’ very long-term real (i.e. inflation-adjusted) estimates of the spodumene price.
Management teams are looking past current pricing, putting recent weakness down to the typical volatility experienced in any commodity price cycle. They’re effectively ignoring it in the belief that eventually prices will return to their long-run price estimate and their profitability will recover.
Spot prices are half of managements’ forecasts, notes Citi, questioning whether the lack of supply-side response at Australian producers is simply due to them being “just poorly run”. Citi concedes that for some producers like Pilbara Minerals (Pilgangoora) and Mineral Resources (Wodgina), as their production ramp-ups proceed, economies of scale will likely shift their cost curves to the left.
The big question is whether Australian spodumene producers and those who invest in them can afford to look past the valley in prices? Well, it’s not all doom and gloom for the Australian lithium sector, notes Citi. The broker is tipping that lithium prices will “bottom in Q4”, but ironically this is predicated on supply cuts – “We need to see further supply cuts to re-balance the market”.
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