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IPad Boom Strains Lithium Supplies After Prices Triple

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 5:20 PM on Wednesday, June 20th, 2012

IPad Boom Strains Lithium Supplies After Prices Triple

Investors from JPMorgan Chase & Co. to BlackRock Inc. are trying to make money from the exploding popularity of iPads and increasing sales of hybrid cars by investing in producers of lithium for batteries.

Prices for the conductive metal, the lightest in the periodic table, have tripled since 2000 in a market now worth $1 billion a year as uses expand in vehicles, ceramics, electronics and lubricants. Apple Inc. (AAPL) and Toyota Motor Corp. (7203), maker of the Prius electric-gasoline car, have few alternatives as they pursue higher performance and mobility, leading Dahlman Rose & Co. analysts to forecast lithium demand will double by 2020.

Talison Lithium Ltd. (TLH), whose shares had gained 22 percent in the month before today, together with Soc. Quimica & Minera de Chile SA, Rockwood Holdings Inc. and FMC Corp. (FMC), account for almost 95 percent of world supply. Rio Tinto Group (RIO), the third- biggest mining company, may join the largest suppliers if it goes ahead with a mine in Serbia it says is capable of producing 20 percent of global output of the metal.

“There are some companies now that we think are attractive to get a hold of lithium exposure,” Evy Hambro, who manages about $13 billion in mining stocks for BlackRock in London, said in an interview. “We’ve got a small exposure today and we’re looking for some more,” he said without naming any companies.

Demand for lithium-ion rechargeable batteries out of Asia has helped prices climb threefold in the last 12 years, London- based Roskill Information Services Ltd. analyst Robert Baylis said. Global use doubled from 2000 to 2011 according to Roskill, which has recently consulted on six lithium projects.

Lithium Oligopoly

The advantage of lithium-ion over other battery types is that a typical cell can generate more electricity than competing cells such as lead-acid. There is about 1.7 grams (0.6 ounce) of lithium carbonate equivalent in a mobile phone, 2.1 grams in a smart phone and 20 grams in a tablet, according to Dahlman Rose.

There will be a “step change” in the global lithium industry in 2016 or 2017 when electric cars became more commonplace, Rockwood (ROC) Chief Executive Officer Seifollah Ghasemi said. Hybrid electric vehicles that are fitted with a lithium- ion battery contain about 1.3 kilograms (2.9 pounds) of the material, plug-in hybrid electric vehicles have about 12.8 kilograms, while an electric vehicle uses about 19.2 kilograms.

The four-strong lithium “oligopoly has the capacity to significantly ramp supply higher, but it will take time and significant capital to accomplish,” Dahlman Rose analysts Anthony Young and Anthony Rizzuto said in a May 16th report. “There are a limited number of known high-grade resources that can be economically extracted and there has not been a new lithium mine constructed in the last 25 years.”

Biggest Producer

Global consumption may jump to 300,000 metric tons a year by 2020 from about 150,000 tons now, Dahlman Rose said June 7. Demand for lithium batteries has been growing at about 25 percent a year, outpacing the 4 percent to 5 percent overall gain in lithium, the firm said.

“Anywhere between a doubling and a tripling of demand in the next 10 years is absolutely our view,” Peter Oliver, CEO of Talison, the biggest producer, said in an interview. “Maybe a doubling is with minimal impact from electric vehicles, and if electric vehicles take off in a big way in the next 10 years it could be as much as tripling.”

Neil Gregson, manager of about $6.9 billion in natural resource assets at JPMorgan Asset Management, said in an interview in London he’s studying investing in the industry. “You can’t see any reason why that won’t be a high growth market for many, many years. It’s a very interesting area.”

Ponce, Kravis

Rio is researching the development of its Jadar lithium- boron operation at a time when other suppliers are expanding output to meet rising demand. Talison, the Perth-based company with a market share of about 32 percent, completed an expansion at its Greenbushes mine in Western Australia this month that has allowed it to double production capacity.

SQM, controlled by billionaire Julio Ponce, is the second- largest, followed by Rockwood, which is backed by Henry Kravis’s KKR & Co., and Philadelphia-based FMC. SQM stock has risen 2.1 percent this year, Rockwood 17 percent and FMC 20 percent. Talison rose as much as 12 percent today in Toronto, the biggest intraday gain in more than three months.

Chile, the second-biggest producing country behind Australia, last week said it will award 20-year concessions to exploit lithium brine in salt lakes. The plan allows developers to mine as much as 100,000 metric tons of the mineral over two decades, said Pablo Wagner, a government undersecretary.

Rio’s Jadar project is in pre-feasibility, which involves conducting studies to better understand the parameters of the deposit and any social and environmental impacts, the company said in an e-mailed response to questions.

Rio ‘Excited’

Lithium is “going to be so critical to that future world of electric vehicles and hybrids,” Tom Albanese, CEO of Rio Tinto, said April 19 in London. “We’ve got a lot of interest from Japanese companies, from Korean companies that actually want to be in the forefront of hybrid and lithium technologies, so I’m actually pretty excited about the project.”

Toyota’s Prius, a niche vehicle when it went on sale 15 years ago, jumped to the world’s third best-selling car line in the first quarter as U.S. demand and incentives in Japan turned the hybrid into a mainstream hit. In the quarter, sales soared to 247,230 cars. While most Priuses sold so far feature a nickel-metal hydride battery pack, the latest model plug-in hybrid contains a lithium-ion battery supplied by Panasonic Corp.

“It’s less than 1 percent of the market now,” Talison’s Oliver said of lithium’s use in batteries for electric vehicles. “We do tend to try and portray a fairly conservative view, but if some of these new technologies take off, it’s going to be a very exciting time for us.”

Tablet Computers

Since the start of Prius sales in Japan in 1997, Toyota has sold 4 million hybrid-electric vehicles worldwide, including 1.5 million in the U.S., the company said May 22.

The global market for tablet computers is growing faster than expected, with Apple’s iPad widening its lead as consumers’ top choice, market researcher International Data Corp. said June. 14. Worldwide shipments of tablets this year will be 107.4 million units, up from an earlier projection of 106.1 million, Framingham, Massachusetts-based IDC said.

Worldwide shipments of tablets should reach 142.8 million next year and 222.1 million by 2016, according to IDC.

“One can claim that without lithium, the whole mobile technology would not have been possible,” Rockwood’s Ghasemi told a Deutsche Bank AG conference June 13. “You use the product every single day.”

Golden Goose

Battery-maker A123 Systems Inc. (AONE) rose 52 percent in New York trading on June 12 after saying it had developed an improved lithium-ion cell that can cut costs of rechargeable and hybrid vehicles. The new cells will be produced next year and can perform better in extreme heat and cold than competing packs, it said.

Expanding battery sales to automakers is seen as the “golden goose” for the lithium industry, according to Roskill, and has spurred new entrants such as Galaxy Resources Ltd. and underpinned expansions by existing producers. Lithium-ion batteries are the biggest application for the material, accounting for about 22 percent of use.

“This is an industry which is consumer led,” Iggy Tan, managing director of Australia’s Galaxy, which made the first sale of a lithium product last month, said in an interview from Perth. “Once it takes off it’s a bit like mobile phones, it’s exponential.”

Plug-in Sedans

A123 supplies batteries for General Motors Co. (GM)’s Spark electric car, Bayerische Motoren Werke AG’s BMW 5 Series hybrid sedan, rechargeable and hybrid cars from China’s SAIC Motor Corp. (600104), buses made by Daimler AG and Volvo AB, and delivery trucks built by Smith Electric Vehicles Corp.

General Motors’ Chevrolet Volt was the best-selling rechargeable auto in the U.S. in May, topping the Prius and Nissan Motor Co.’s all-electric Leaf hatchback. Deliveries of the GM plug-in sedan more than tripled in the month.

Suppliers of lithium have benefited as some car-makers switch from older model nickel-cadmium batteries to lithium-ion.

“It’s really a new technology and it’s taken some time to take hold,” Jonathan Lee, a battery materials and technologies analyst at Byron Capital Markets in Toronto, said in an interview. “Everything is going to lithium-ion whether or not it was nickel-cadmium in the beginning or not.”

Rockwood on May 14 proposed a price increase of $1,000 a ton, or about 22 percent, for lithium salt sold to customers in the year starting July 1. It said the higher price would allow it to fund expansion of its mines. Talison’s Oliver said he raised prices 15 percent in the first half and expects to increase prices again in the second half.

Hockey Stick

SQM, based in Santiago, said May 30 that sales from its lithium unit rose 12 percent in the first quarter to $47.5 million after prices gained 16 percent. Prices for lithium peaked in 2007 before declining through to 2010, according to Roskill.

Galaxy, which sells to customers including Japan’s Mitsubishi Corp. (8058), is positioning itself for what Tan describes as potential “hockey stick-shaped” growth in demand for lithium batteries. It has built a A$100 million ($102 million) lithium carbonate plant in China to better serve Asian customers and made the first sale from the operation last month.

Galaxy is seeking to complete an all-share takeover of Lithium One Inc. (LI) valuing it at about C$112 million ($110 million) to add the Sal de Vida project in Argentina.

“The outlook for lithium is very strong in light of some of the uncertainty of other metals such as copper and many of the industrial metals,” Byron Capital’s Lee said. “Lithium has grown roughly at 10 to 15 percent over the past two years on a per-annum basis. We’re having another strong year this year.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Jesse Riseborough in London at [email protected]

Source: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-06-19/ipad-boom-strains-lithium-supplies-after-prices-triple.html

The Lithium Ion Battery – A Potential Growth Driver for Natural Graphite

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 3:48 PM on Wednesday, June 13th, 2012

I’m Digging Glen Eagle Resources 43-101 (Lithium) and Market Cap

Posted by AGORACOM at 10:52 AM on Tuesday, February 15th, 2011

Good morning to you all. This isn’t the full press release, just my highlights for today’s AGORACOM Small-Cap TV. I like the numbers, the location and the fact it has a market cap < $10M. Haven’t bought in yet but taking a close look. If you have any thoughts, let me know.

Glen Eagle Resources Inc.: New Authier Lithium NI 43-101 Compliant Resource Estimate 40% Above Historic

Glen Eagle Resources Inc. (TSX VENTURE:GER)

announce a new NI 43-101 compliant mineral resource estimate for the Authier Lithium Property. The mineral resource estimate, using a base case cut-off grade of 0.8% Li2O, totals 4,167,000 tonnes grading 1.04% Li2O in the indicated resource category with an additional 2,290,000 tonnes grading 1.00% Li2O in the inferred resource category.

It is an important milestone for the Company to have a NI 43-101 compliant resource estimate for the Authier Lithium Property which is strategically located 45 km NW of Val d’Or in the Province of Quebec. It confirms an approximately 40% increase over the historic resource estimate when converted into metric tonnes.

Glen Eagle has 100% interest in the Authier lithium deposit in Lamothe, Quebec, 45 km NW of Val D’or and nearby Canada Lithium.

Last Sale: 0.33 52 Week Range: 0.09 – 0.34 Market Cap: 8.72M

American Lithium Minerals (AMLM:OTCBB) Joins AGORACOM 100 With 16,000 Acres In Lithium Rich Montezuma Valley, Nevada

Posted by AGORACOM at 6:41 PM on Thursday, October 29th, 2009

(AMLM: OTCBB)

I am very happy to announce that AGORACOM has added a very promising Lithium player to the AGORACOM 100 – American Lithium Minerals Inc.  As always, assume I am horribly conflicted by the fact AMLM is an AGORACOM client but here are a few reasons why I like the company:

First of all, the company is Lithium focused and we now know that Lithium is going to play an important role in the future of clean energy.  We’ll be educating you on this over the next 12 months but a good start is this article from CNET discussing Honda’s plans to incorporate Lithium batteries into future hybrid vehicles.  In addition, a Google search of “Lithium + Obama” brings up some pretty powerful articles.   However, for those of you with no time to link over and read the stories, the future of Lithium is best summed up in this 59-second YouTube video produced by the company:

As a result, the impending increased demand for Lithium will require new sources being brought on stream.

How is AMLM going to capitalize on this?  The company has 100% mineral rights to 16,000 acres comprising four claim blocks in Nevada’s lithium-rich Montezuma Valley.  What does this mean?  According to the company:

The volcanics surrounding the valley contain some of the richest lithium
concentrations in the world and their brines and evaporities have been
accumulating in the vast Montezuma and Clayton Valley for at least 33,000
years. These brines have the highest lithium content of any brines tested by
the USGS in the southwestern US.

AMLM is currently in the process of assessing the size, quality and processing alternatives of its Lithium Brine Project.

With respect to the surrounding area, the company states that early estimates put the valley’s lithium deposits as high as 700 million kg, ranking it second only in size to the deposits found in Chile.  I note two things here.  First, as with all area plays, deposits in a surrounding area do not necessarily equate into deposits for another area.  Second, neither AMLM’s Lithium Bring Project, nor the surrounding valley’s lithium deposits have been confirmed by an NI 43-101.

Finally, the metals and mining space is one place where you need real, experienced management if you are going to get anything done.  AMLM recognized this when they recently hired on Judy Baker to be the company’s President and CEO.  Her bio is sure to impress:

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Ms. Baker has a long and successful track record in the mining/mineral exploration business and associated equity markets. Most recently Ms. Baker was the President, CEO and a director of Canada Lithium Corp., Ms. Baker was instrumental in restructuring the company and strategically positioning it into the forefront of the international lithium business. During her 20-month tenure the company’s market cap grew from $5 million to over $30 million, an over 600% increase. Ms. Baker holds an Honours B.Sc. Geological Engineering in Mineral Resources Exploration and a M.B.A., and has seventeen years of experience in the mining and mineral exploration sector including equity analysis, fund management; and exploration and mining company activity.

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Now you know why American Lithium Minerals is AGORACOM 100 worthy and why we look forward to reporting on the company’s progress over the next 12 months and beyond.  To continue your research, I’ve provided some more information below to get you going.

Regards,
George


Oct 29, 09 09:00AM
Oct 23, 09 09:02AM

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