Managing lithium price volatility: A risk management framework using cash flow at risk (CFaR)

When lithium prices move up and down, your production costs become harder to predict. This guide explains how to measure and manage that risk using Notional Cash Flow at Risk (CFaR), a tool that helps estimate the potential impact of price swings on your budget.

    When lithium prices move up and down, your production costs become harder to predict. This guide explains how to measure and manage that risk using Notional Cash Flow at Risk (CFaR), a tool that helps estimate the potential impact of price swings on your budget.

    Defining the metric: Notional value vs. cash Flow

    For an OEM, ‘Cash Flow at Risk’ (CFaR) quantifies the potential impact of price changes on your actual cash outflows for battery materials. By monitoring this, you convert abstract market volatility into concrete budget impact projections.

    The 60-day hedging trigger

    To keep your budget on track, you can set a quarterly (60-day) CFaR alert. If projected costs move beyond an acceptable range, it can trigger your hedging strategy. The goal is to keep actual costs within budget and avoid large, unexpected increases.

    Mechanism structure:

    1. Monitor: Fastmarkets price benchmark at preset intervals
    2. Threshold: When the 60-day CFaR model indicates a high probability of exceeding your budget ceiling (the 95% level), the hedging program is activated.
    3. Action: Execute a hedging strategy—such as purchasing futures or swaps—to lock in costs for the upcoming 60-day window.

    Practical use case

    An OEM has a battery supply contract that creates exposure to $10 million of lithium hydroxide (500,000 kg × $20/kg).

    The question is: When should the OEM start hedging?

    A Cash Flow at Risk (CFaR) analysis shows that, over the next 3 months, there is a 5% chance that lithium prices could increase costs by $3.37 million. Using the Fastmarkets VaR Calculator, this represents the potential loss at risk for the exposure.

    However, the company is only willing to tolerate a maximum loss of $2 million. Since the projected risk of $3.37 million is $1.37 million above that limit, the OEM may consider triggering its hedging program to bring potential losses back within its acceptable risk range.

    The hedging program kicks in and the goal is to reduce the tail risk (VaR) back into their comfort zone.

    The EOM performs some scenarios using the weights on the VaR calculator. They discover that by reducing its exposure to Lithium Hydroxide with a futures contract or swap by 50% they can bring their VaR risk below $2 million back into their comfort zone.

    Conclusion

    By adopting a CFaR-based trigger, you move from reactive budgeting to proactive financial management. This framework ensures that lithium price volatility does not disrupt your production targets, allowing the organization to operate with greater financial certainty.

    Looking for enterprise-grade risk management tools built for corporate treasurers, risk managers, and strategic procurement teams? Confidently quantify exposure, prove hedge effectiveness, and protect margins with our Risk management solutions.

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