New York, Feb 4, 2026, 07:01 EST — Premarket
Shares of U.S.-listed lithium miners climbed in early trading Wednesday, despite ongoing drops in spot lithium carbonate prices in China and a cautious trading mood. Albemarle edged up around 3.5%, SQM added about 5.4%, and Lithium Americas jumped 8.4%. The Global X Lithium & Battery Tech ETF also gained roughly 2.6%.
The sector shift follows Washington’s push to tighten policy tools aimed at shoring up supply chains for critical minerals like lithium, which have seen steep price drops in recent years. U.S. Interior Secretary Doug Burgum revealed that roughly 30 countries are interested in joining a critical minerals trade “club” featuring price floors. He cautioned that a dominant supplier could “flood the market” and “destroy the economic value” of production elsewhere. This week, President Donald Trump unveiled “Project Vault,” a strategic minerals stockpile supported by a $10 billion loan from the U.S. Export-Import Bank, plus nearly $2 billion in private investment, Burgum noted. (Reuters)
Demand is driving a fresh focus on the sector. Global battery storage installations soared 43% in 2025 and Wood Mackenzie projects a 10.8% annual growth rate through 2034. Roman Loosen, senior executive at Fluence, a battery storage supplier, warned of “some short-term price volatility” due to fluctuating raw material costs and changing trade policies. (Reuters)
Shanghai Metals Market reported its battery-grade lithium carbonate index at 149,831 yuan per metric ton. Prices for battery-grade material ranged from 142,000 to 164,000 yuan/ton, averaging 153,000 yuan. The most active lithium carbonate futures contract in China traded mostly between 145,600 and 152,600 yuan/ton. Downstream buyers largely stayed on the sidelines, preferring to “buy the dip,” which kept spot inquiries and transactions “slightly sluggish.” (Metal)
Supply still tells half the story, and it’s heavy in spots. Zimbabwe shipped 1.128 million metric tons of lithium-bearing spodumene concentrate in 2025, up 11%, according to official data. But revenues held steady, dragged down by weaker prices. Reuters noted that hard-rock spodumene prices have climbed back above $2,000 a ton early this year, from roughly $610 in mid-2025 — though that’s nowhere near the highs seen in 2022. (Reuters)
Project Vault aims to counter supply shocks and volatile prices instead of tracking a single benchmark. EXIM announced its board has approved a direct loan of up to $10 billion for the initiative, framing it as a public-private partnership to stockpile critical raw materials in U.S. facilities. Early backers include GE Vernova, Boeing, and Western Digital. “Project Vault is designed to support domestic manufacturers from supply shocks,” EXIM Chairman John Jovanovic said. (Exim)
That said, the policy push won’t solve everything overnight. Setting up price floors and stockpiles isn’t instant, and the China spot market is still behaving as if supply is ample and buyers aren’t rushing. A slowdown in battery orders could quickly reveal that once more.
Traders are eyeing earnings and guidance as the next major catalyst. Albemarle plans to release its fourth-quarter 2025 results after the NYSE closes on Feb. 11. Investors will be looking closely for updates on contract pricing, customer demand, and spending plans. (Albemarle)