New York, June 1, 2026, 19:02 EDT
Lithium Americas Corp. shares rose on Monday, standing out in a weaker lithium group as investors kept paying for exposure to the company’s Thacker Pass project in Nevada.
The stock was last quoted at $5.51 after the U.S. market close, up about 5.8% from the previous close, with volume of 18.7 million shares. Albemarle fell 3.0%, SQM lost 2.8%, and the Global X Lithium & Battery Tech ETF, an exchange-traded fund that holds lithium and battery shares, slipped 1.2%.
That divergence matters because Lithium Americas is not a broad producer like Albemarle or SQM. It is mainly a construction story: Thacker Pass, a large lithium project that is meant to feed North American battery supply chains, is still being built. The stock tends to trade less like a mature miner and more like a leveraged bet on project execution, lithium prices and U.S. industrial policy.
The commodity backdrop helped. Benchmark battery-grade lithium carbonate in China rose 0.85% on June 1 to 179,000 yuan per tonne, though it was still down 4.53% over the past month. Lithium carbonate is the processed material used in many electric-vehicle and energy-storage batteries.
Lithium Americas’ latest company update, released in May, said construction at Thacker Pass was “accelerating toward mechanical completion in late 2027,” with more than 1,300 workers on site in mid-May and more than 2,000 expected at peak construction. Chief Executive Jonathan Evans said detailed engineering was almost complete and financing had been secured. Lithium Americas
The balance sheet is central to the trade. The company said it had about $1.2 billion in total cash and restricted cash at March 31, including $529 million at the Thacker Pass joint venture level, and had received a $432 million second advance from the U.S. Department of Energy loan in February.
Capital expenditure, or capex — money spent to build and equip the project — remains heavy. Lithium Americas has kept its 2026 Thacker Pass Phase 1 capex target at $1.3 billion to $1.6 billion, after capitalizing $1.3 billion of construction and project-related costs by the end of March.
General Motors owns 38% of the Thacker Pass joint venture, while Lithium Americas holds 62%. Project financing includes a $2.23 billion DOE loan and strategic investments from GM and Orion Resource Partners, the company said.
But the bullish case is not clean. Lithium Americas has estimated potential tariff exposure of $80 million to $120 million for Phase 1 construction costs, most of it expected in 2026, and said tariff and trade restrictions can be announced with little notice. It also has an at-the-market share-sale program — a facility that lets a company sell stock into the market over time — for up to $250 million, which could dilute existing holders if used.
Analysts, as a group, are not chasing the stock. MarketScreener’s consensus shows a “hold” rating from 11 analysts, with an average target price of $5.341, below Monday’s last quoted price. MarketScreener
The broader lithium market is firmer than last year’s slump, but still unsettled. SQM executive Carlos Diaz told Reuters in April that he expected lithium carbonate prices around $15 to $18 a kilogram in 2026, not “$7 or $8” as seen in weaker periods, while also warning prices were unlikely to revisit the extremes of three years ago. MINING.COM
For Lithium Americas, the next test is less about Monday’s tape and more about whether Thacker Pass stays on schedule as peak construction arrives. The company is targeting a definitive capital estimate in the second half of 2026, a milestone that could either steady the stock or reopen the cost debate.