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Depends, how much of this driven by China's appetite? How's iron ore faring?Anyone else concerned about the trajectory of this chart?
Holding a couple of lithium plays that have done quite well, but I've seen charts like this before. It normally ends up tulip-like.
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Depends, how much of this driven by China's appetite? How's iron ore faring?
There's a supply/demand thing happening, but I'm not sure if this rise is solely based on that. I don't understand the market as well as I'd like, but parabolic charts worry me. BHP has stated they're not interested in getting into the sector and Goldman called it toppy about 6 months ago so my radar is up. As an example of what could happen in a turnaround, look at Tin and MLX. On the other hand, RIO seems bullish on picking up lithium, so it's a he said she said thing at the moment. Having traded through the uranium craze in the noughties I'm wary.
Thinking and analysis?You really need to be able to do some of your own thinking and analysis. Simply following what others want you to think will serve them but not you.
Thinking and analysis?
What is this terribly boring laborious and foul construct of the mind of which you speak?
?
The benefit that Lithium has over other commodities is the fact that much of the demand is legislated - that is, the push for a green economy and the gradual removal of ICEs. It's also supported by a demographic change that recognises the importance of environmental conservation.
To date, much of the demand is driven by China as a lithium processor, although that will change as Western nations seek to diversify their input sources. This is a risk inherent to the lithium trade.
If China enters recession, Lithium processing will probably take a hit (as has iron ore) ergo fall in prices as miners flood a shrinking group of processors.
In fact, many of the lithium processors have purchased significant stakes in lithium miners.
The other risk is the technology shift. Lithium's value is in the production of batteries. There are other technologies out there, which although experimental, may one day usurp lithium as the green metal.
Lithium is nowhere near as green as the narrative suggests. I'm sure we've all seen the memes involving train loads of coal labelled as electric vehicle fuel, etc. Lithium is not an energy source, it's not a replacement for oil, it's a replacement for fuel tanks. As usual these days, China controls the narrative, and the true source of the drive to change is money and power, not environmentalism. It's no coincidence that the west controlled oil, China controls lithium, and the whole system is making oil obsolete and making lithium king, removing power and money from the west and handing it to China.
But, the misleading narrative doesn't change the fact that the whole ESG, virtue-signaling, dishonest power change etc will increase the price of lithium and make those investing in it wealthy, while the west continues its death by a thousand cuts.
I knew this would happen.Research for something better never stops.
Queensland-developed battery technology a potential game changer for energy industry
A Brisbane company could change the face of Australia's energy landscape forever with an eco-friendly, carbon neutral cell that charges 70 times faster than a lithium ion battery and can be reused thousands of times.www.abc.net.au
Agreed, but how long does it take to transform research into a successful commercial product, that is then standardised and widely adopted? Too long to worry about for lithium IMOResearch for something better never stops.
Queensland-developed battery technology a potential game changer for energy industry
A Brisbane company could change the face of Australia's energy landscape forever with an eco-friendly, carbon neutral cell that charges 70 times faster than a lithium ion battery and can be reused thousands of times.www.abc.net.au
I knew this would happen.
Lithium batteries are too volatile and expensive.
gg
It doesn't matter what it truly is or isn't. The myth around lithium (whether you believe it or not) is that it is necessary for the green revolution, which virtually all Western governments have subscribed to and legislated targets for.
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