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Lithium Investors Hope Elon Musk Will Put Money Into Mining

Analysts say Tesla may soon realise that building a mine or processing facility from scratch is not as easy as it sounds and the automaker should instead consider a buyout


Australian lithium miner Lake Resources has hit back at a short seller's report claiming that its technology is too costly and uses too much water.
A lithium brine pond. Lake Resources plans to deliver lithium from its Kachi project in Argentina using Lilac's ion exchange process that can be operated with zero net usage of fresh water, the company said in a statement. File photo: Reuters.

 

Elon Musk’s recent musings that high lithium prices may force Tesla to make its own supply of the electric vehicle (EV) battery metal have fuelled hopes by some that the billionaire entrepreneur will opt for a buyout of an established mining company.

The automotive giant already has supply contracts for nickel, lithium and a range of other EV metals from suppliers across the globe.

But it needs more, and industry analysts say Tesla may soon realise that building a mine or processing facility from scratch is not as easy as it sounds and the automaker should instead consider a buyout.

“Price of lithium has gone to insane levels! Tesla might actually have to get into the mining & refining directly at scale, unless costs improve,” the Tesla chief executive tweeted earlier this month.

Lithium prices are up more than 80% this year and nickel prices have gyrated heavily amid trading turmoil in London.

The billionaire entrepreneur had already complained about “significant” jumps in raw materials costs for Tesla, which has raised prices of its vehicles twice this year.

“Should management be serious about entering the lithium space, we think the most likely route would be an acquisition of an existing lithium company,” said Morningstar lithium analyst Seth Goldstein.

Shares of junior miner Lithium Corporation jumped more than 30% on April 13 after unsubstantiated reports that it and its Nevada brine deposits had been sold to Tesla, a rumour the company denied.

Shares of larger lithium producers, such as Albemarle, reacted little to Musk’s tweets.

“Elon, if you want to talk to us, come and say hello,” said Tom Lewis, Lithium Corporation’s chief executive, who said the buyout rumours were more likely to be an “orchestrated plan to pump (our shares) up a bit”.

Amid the minerals talk, Musk last week made a $43 billion cash offer to buy social networking platform Twitter.

“If you’re going to spend $43 billion and you run Tesla and you understand better than anyone Tesla’s future lithium needs, you might want to spend a lot less and buy a lithium company or two,” said lithium industry consultant Joe Lowry.

 

  • Reuters, with additional editing by George Russell

 

 

 

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George Russell

George Russell is a freelance writer and editor based in Hong Kong who has lived in Asia since 1996. His work has been published in the Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg, New York Post, Variety, Forbes and the South China Morning Post.

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