Rising futures prices drive Chinese battery makers to increase nickel output amid EV slowdown

A host of Chinese battery manufacturers have been increasing their production of electrolytic nickel to reap gains from strong futures prices because the growth in downstream demand for electric vehicles (EVs) is slowing, Fastmarkets heard on Tuesday May 21

Output of electrolytic nickel, a form of nickel metal made from sulfate by Chinese producers in Indonesia, has been rising steadily since last year. The volume jumped to a peak as high as 30,000 tonnes per month during the first quarter of 2024, market sources said. And they estimated that it could increase by another 1,000 tpm in May.

“Funnily, it’s mostly new energy vehicle [NEV] firms that are making metals these days,” a veteran trader said.

This development has come at the same time as a slowdown in EV sales growth in China following the country’s discontinuation of a subsidy program, which had led to earlier rapid growth in the industry. Battery chemicals such as nickel sulfate and cobalt sulfate traditionally go into precursor plants to feed downstream EV demand, but they can also be converted to refined metal, at a time when that is commanding higher prices.

The benchmark London Metal Exchange 3m (Aug 24) Official price of nickel has been on an upward trend, surging to a historic high at $21,625 per tonne on May 20, from $16,795 per tonne at the start of the year.

Nickel sulfate prices rose too, tracking the uptrend in the futures market, but market sources largely attributed this to higher input costs, a result of the elevated nickel prices, rather than any demand turnaround in the EV sector.

Fastmarkets most recently assessed the price of nickel sulfate, min 21%, max 22.5%; cobalt 10ppm max, exw China, at 30,500-31,000 yuan per tonne on May 17. This was up by 2.5% week on week, and up by 3.9% from 25,000-26,000 yuan per tonne at the start of the year.

Facing the sluggishness in the EV sector, battery makers instead have resorted since last year to turning the chemical into the more valuable metal. This trend has strengthened in recent months with the arbitrage widening between the two types of product.

For example, Fastmarkets has heard that a major nickel producer was planning to expand output of electrolytic nickel by 1,000-2,000 tonnes per month. And a producer in Indonesia was heard to be holding back some it its intermediary products to use in metal refining, instead of feeding nickel sulfate.

One nickel producer source said that there was no doubt that the growth in nickel metal output would continue in May with downstream orders from the EV sector down in the months ahead.

But a second producer source did not expect this growth to be sustainable because, he said, producers were already all operating at almost full capacity.

Dylan Duan in Shanghai contributed to this article.

Want to find out more about our critical minerals price data, forecasts and market insights? Head to our critical minerals hub today.

What to read next
The sharp rise in demand for lithium is outpacing the growth of an independent US supply chain, Ian Rodger, chief executive officer of lithium development company US Elemental, told Fastmarkets in an exclusive interview on Wednesday June 3.
Japanese auto producer Honda canceled plans to produce electric vehicles in North America amid weak demand and pressure from the US government, the company said during its earnings call for the fiscal year ended March 31, 2026.
An interview with Assistant Secretary, Michael Cadenazzi at the Department of War, as it is known, and Zach Boykin, the department's technical director for strategic and critical minerals with Andrea Hotter for the Fast Forward podcast.
The publication of Fastmarkets’ assessments of the nickel min 99.8% full plate premium, in-whs Shanghai, and the nickel min 99.8% full plate premium, cif Shanghai for Tuesday May 26 were delayed because of a reporter error. Fastmarkets’ pricing database has been updated. The following prices were affected:MB-NI-0143 Nickel min 99.8% full plate premium, in-whs Shanghai, […]
Critical minerals have long sat quietly in the background of industrial supply chains. Today, they are at the centre of national security strategy. Fastmarkets’ Andrea Hotter speaks to senior officials from the US Department of Defense in the lastest Fast Forward podcast episode.
The recent appreciation of the Chinese yuan against the US dollar is rippling through Asia’s ferrosilicon market, squeezing Chinese export margins, lifting regional prices and shifting currency risks downstream to buyers.