Lithium stocks rip amid warning of more China disruptions
Gus McCubbingMarkets reporter
Aug 27, 2025 – 5.46pm
ASX-listed lithium stocks ripped higher on Wednesday after UBS warned that the disruptions to Chinese supply, which have triggered a spike in the price of spodumene, would likely continue for longer than expected.
The suspension of production of a major mine owned by Chinese battery giant Contemporary Amperex Technology earlier this month had already triggered a huge rally in lithium stocks, with the price of the white metal soaring about 70 per cent from a June low of $US575 a tonne.
ASX-listed lithium stocks rocketed on Wednesday after UBS warned disruptions to production of the white metal in China could continue for longer than first expected. Tony McDonough
CATL, the world’s largest manufacturer of electric vehicle batteries, said on August 10 that its lithium mine in China’s Jiangxi province would only be temporarily halted for at least three months after it failed to extend a key mining permit, according to Bloomberg.
But UBS analyst Levi Spry published a note on Tuesday which said the investment bank’s China team had now concluded that the CATL mine could be closed for 12 months because of the ongoing licensing issue.
This meant lithium prices could jump another 32 per cent in the next year.
As a result, UBS has upgraded PLS, Australia’s largest pure-play lithium company, from a “sell” to “neutral” and revised short-term share price target to $2.30, up from $1.60. It also upgraded fellow lithium producer IGO from “sell” to “neutral”, with a revised short-term share price target of $5.75, up from $4.80.
This came after PLS chief executive Dale Henderson on Monday said he was confident the lithium market would turn in his favour over the long run, after an extended price slide for the battery metal dragged the miner to a near $200 million annual loss.
“Exactly how long-lived [the delay] is remains to be seen, with higher prices potentially solving permitting issues more quickly and incentivising some latent capacity,” Spry said in the note. “Nonetheless, we see material upgrades to IGO and PLS earnings per share.”
UBS has also upgraded Mineral Resources to “buy” from a “sell” with its short-term share price target rising to $40.40 from $37.40, based on the expected disruptions.
“We upgrade Mineral Resources to buy following upgrades to our lithium price forecast, reflecting expectations for strict execution of Chinese mining right investigations, and resultant supply disruption,” UBS analyst Lachlan Shaw said in a separate note.
The upgrades unleashed a broad-based jump in ASX lithium stocks on Wednesday, with PLS jumping 8.8 per cent to $2.34, IGO up 3.9 per cent to $5.35, Mineral Resources 6.8 per cent to $37.45, and Liontown Resources 9.5 per cent to 92¢.
CATL’s mine, a key source of China’s supply of lithium, has been closely monitored by traders, who reportedly flew drones over the project last week as speculation mounted about its permit renewal.
Lithium prices surged in September last year when CATL suspended production at its project in Jiangxi, but swiftly reversed in February when the company announced it would restart the operation.
Wednesday’s share price jump comes after a burst of short covering in lithium stocks last week, with Perennial’s Natural Resources Trust portfolio manager Sam Berridge saying lithium had formed part of a broader rotation into resources stocks.
“There’s a preference from a number of funds to directing flows into the most shorted stocks within the resources sector – so lithium certainly ticks that box,” he said.