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China’s lithium carbonate prices surge amid market volatility and export newsChina’s lithium carbonate prices showed sharp volatility from late February into early March. Domestic China and CJK prices averaged lower in February, but the month was not without volatility and a late rally in futures lithium prices. Lithium carbonate CIF CJK prices fell to $17.84 per kg ahead of the holidays in Asia, a significant decline from $20.38 per kg a week earlier. As the market returned following the Lunar New Year holiday in mid-February, prices climbed rapidly. Asian carbonate prices rocketed back above $20 per kg, tracking surging GFEX futures contracts as the market tried to process news of export controls in Africa.
Zimbabwe’s lithium export ban sparks price surge and industry shiftsOn February 25, Zimbabwe suspended exports of all raw minerals and lithium concentrates with immediate effect, accelerating a previously planned ban scheduled for 2027 as the country pushes for greater domestic value-added processing. Zimbabwe is forecast to supply 124,000 tonnes of LCE in 2026, around 7% of global output, and accounts for about 15% of China’s spodumene imports. Huayou Cobalt currently operates a lithium sulfate processing plant, with Sinomine Resource Group and Sichuan Yahua Industrial Group currently developing capacity. Following the news of the ban, spodumene prices reacted sharply, reaching $2,430–$2,500 per tonne in late February.
The lithium market is set for another volatile month in March with many shifting dynamics causing rapid shifts in sentiment. The fundamentals do not appear to have significantly altered from the previously held view of a tighter market in early 2026, with demand outpacing supply. Zimbabwe’s earlier-than-expected export ban on lithium concentrate has added further fuel to the bull case fire, with elevated spodumene prices likely to speed up the resumption of mining activities at mothballed Australian mines. Downstream battery and CAM manufacturers will be looking to take advantage of the final month of export tax rebates in March, which is expected to continue to support lithium salt prices. Rob Searle, Fastmarkets
The lithium market is set for another volatile month in March with many shifting dynamics causing rapid shifts in sentiment. The fundamentals do not appear to have significantly altered from the previously held view of a tighter market in early 2026, with demand outpacing supply. Zimbabwe’s earlier-than-expected export ban on lithium concentrate has added further fuel to the bull case fire, with elevated spodumene prices likely to speed up the resumption of mining activities at mothballed Australian mines. Downstream battery and CAM manufacturers will be looking to take advantage of the final month of export tax rebates in March, which is expected to continue to support lithium salt prices.
Rob Searle, Fastmarkets
Cobalt prices climb in February amid supply delays from DRCCobalt prices continued to rise in February due to market tightness. Exports from the DRC – the world’s top cobalt miner – have resumed, but with shipping times from the country to China typically taking three months, little material is likely to arrive in China this quarter.
DRC export quotes aim to ease cobalt shortages, but deficits loomOnce the DRC’s export quota system is fully up to speed, and the backlog of un-exported material has also been shipped, the availability of material should improve. However, this should still leave the market facing deficits this year and next.
The DRC’s quota system will result in market deficits this year and next. We expect market tightness to be particularly severe in Q1 2026 since material from the DRC is unlikely to reach China during this period. The risk of a further supply squeeze from Indonesia could tighten the market even further, however. The longer prices remain elevated, the greater the incentive for EV battery consumers to minimize the cobalt content in their batteries. Olivier Masson, Fastmarkets
The DRC’s quota system will result in market deficits this year and next. We expect market tightness to be particularly severe in Q1 2026 since material from the DRC is unlikely to reach China during this period. The risk of a further supply squeeze from Indonesia could tighten the market even further, however. The longer prices remain elevated, the greater the incentive for EV battery consumers to minimize the cobalt content in their batteries.
Olivier Masson, Fastmarkets
Nickel prices dip in February but stay above 2025 averagesThe nickel cash price fell in February, with the average LME cash price being 4% lower than in January. However, the price remains well above its 2025 trading range of $14,000–$16,000 per tonne.
Indonesia’s nickel mining quotas aim to accelerate market rebalanceThe Indonesian government is seeking to impose greater supply discipline on its massive nickel industry through greater control of ore mining quotas. This could rebalance the market more quickly than expected.
Indonesia’s nickel quotas face potential revisions amid market uncertaintyHowever, even if the government imposes tighter quotas, there is always the possibility of these being revised as the year progresses.
The nickel market is in a state of structural oversupply due to the growth in Indonesian production. If prices are to remain in their current trading range, there need to be concrete signs that Indonesia will indeed impose greater discipline on the industry. The market still awaits the publication of the definitive annual quotas, however. Olivier Masson, Fastmarkets
The nickel market is in a state of structural oversupply due to the growth in Indonesian production. If prices are to remain in their current trading range, there need to be concrete signs that Indonesia will indeed impose greater discipline on the industry. The market still awaits the publication of the definitive annual quotas, however.
China’s manganese sulfate prices rise amid export tax rebate changesChina’s battery-grade manganese sulfate ex-works mainland China prices went against the typical trend in February, strengthening throughout the month. With the Lunar New Year holidays taking place in the middle of February, the market normally sees a seasonal slowdown in production and manufacturing demand from the battery sector. This year has been different given the changes to China’s export tax rebates, with such rebates for CAM and pCAM ending on April 1. This shift forward in demand has seen ongoing midstream production and demand throughout January and February, with strong consumption expected to continue through to the end of the quarter.
Reduced manganese output tightens market, driving early 2024 price gainsProcessed manganese production slowed in the early stages of 2024. Utilisation rates in January fell to 51%, higher than the typical levels seen throughout 2023, but falling at a time of strong spot demand. Reduced output tightened the market in the first two months of the year, supporting bullish price movements.
China’s battery-grade manganese market tightened in the early stages of 2024 as strong demand from the country’s PCAM and battery sector was met with slowing production. Salt production in China typically slows in February during the holiday period, and with a higher level of midstream and downstream battery manufacturing taking place during the typical seasonal slowdown, manganese sulfate prices rose to levels not seen since June 2022. Rob Searle, Fastmarkets
China’s battery-grade manganese market tightened in the early stages of 2024 as strong demand from the country’s PCAM and battery sector was met with slowing production. Salt production in China typically slows in February during the holiday period, and with a higher level of midstream and downstream battery manufacturing taking place during the typical seasonal slowdown, manganese sulfate prices rose to levels not seen since June 2022.
US graphite market stabilizes with Supreme Court ruling and final duty decisionsThe combination of the Supreme Court ruling and the final determination decision on 93.5% US anti-dumping and 66.7% countervailing duties are giving the market confidence in what long-term duties will look like for graphite products entering the US, following a 2025 dominated by quickly changing rates.
Graphite prices stagnant as market activity resumes post-Lunar New YearPrices across graphite remain stagnant as the market has only just begun to return to activity without the massive, dominant Chinese market during the Lunar New Year holiday.
Synthetic graphite precursor prices dip slightly after late 2025 surgeSynthetic graphite precursors such as petroleum coke and green petroleum coke have edged lower since the start of the year, but this has not outdone the prior continuous rise in the final quarter of 2025 that was driven by trade barriers and increased interest from market participants.
The recent Supreme Court ruling, alongside the final determination of a 93.5% US anti-dumping duty and a 66.7% countervailing duty, has given the market much-needed confidence in the long-term landscape for graphite imports into the US, following a year of rapidly shifting tariffs in 2025. At the same time, graphite prices have been largely stagnant, with activity only just beginning to pick up again as the market emerges from the Lunar New Year holiday. Andrew Saucer, Fastmarkets
The recent Supreme Court ruling, alongside the final determination of a 93.5% US anti-dumping duty and a 66.7% countervailing duty, has given the market much-needed confidence in the long-term landscape for graphite imports into the US, following a year of rapidly shifting tariffs in 2025. At the same time, graphite prices have been largely stagnant, with activity only just beginning to pick up again as the market emerges from the Lunar New Year holiday.
Andrew Saucer, Fastmarkets
China’s black mass demand drives record prices and two-tier market dynamicsSince China’s reopening to black mass imports, aggressive Chinese bidding for high-purity NCM material has lifted South Korea and Southeast Asia CIF payables to record levels, including the first Fastmarkets assessment above 100%. A two-tier market has emerged: production scrap material meeting China’s strict impurity and metal content thresholds commands steep premiums, while EOL-origin material—particularly from Europe—faces weaker demand amid hazardous waste export restrictions. Government incentives, lower import tariffs and rising lithium, nickel and cobalt prices continue to fuel China’s buying appetite, solidifying its dominant position in global black mass procurement.
Malaysia’s e-waste import ban tightens black mass supply and reshapes recycling industryMalaysia’s immediate ban on e-waste imports threatens battery recyclers that rely on imported end-of-life batteries, tightening black mass supply and driving up payables amid strong Chinese demand. Despite near-term disruption, established processors such as EcoNiLi and SungEel HiTech are positioned to expand domestic capacity, strengthening Malaysia’s role as a midstream processing hub. The ban also disrupts aluminium and copper scrap flows, where stricter inspections and regulatory ambiguity continue to delay shipments and raise compliance costs.
Global recycling markets are entering a period of intense competition, with China’s aggressive buying and rising lithium prices pushing black mass payables to unprecedented highs while tightening feedstock availability across the US, Europe and Southeast Asia. At the same time, regulatory shifts and supply constraints are forcing recyclers to adapt quickly, creating a mix of optimism about long-term growth and anxiety over short-term volatility and uneven access to material. Julia Harty, Fastmarkets
Global recycling markets are entering a period of intense competition, with China’s aggressive buying and rising lithium prices pushing black mass payables to unprecedented highs while tightening feedstock availability across the US, Europe and Southeast Asia. At the same time, regulatory shifts and supply constraints are forcing recyclers to adapt quickly, creating a mix of optimism about long-term growth and anxiety over short-term volatility and uneven access to material.
Julia Harty, Fastmarkets
Weakened subsidies and taxes drive 20% drop in Chinese NEV salesRetail Chinese NEV sales have fallen 20% year-over-year relative to 2023, though historically high NEV exports kept wholesale volumes level with last year. The fall follows the weakening of EV trade-in subsidies and the reintroduction of sales tax to NEVs at half the full rate applied to ICE vehicles.
US EV sales plunge 25% in January amid inflation and economic uncertaintyJanuary US EV sales continued the weakness shown at the end of last year as sales fell 25% year-over-year to 86,500 units. Macroeconomic shocks created from rising tensions in the Middle East are likely to stoke inflation and weaken consumer confidence further through the year. This is particularly pertinent for the US economy, which is already suffering from greater-than-normal inflation and auto loan delinquencies.
EV demand weakness through the first quarter looks increasingly persistent, as both China and the US have seen sales fall relative to 2023 year-to-date so far. Albeit with the caveat of the Chinese New Year and it being another difficult month for volumes, BYD has seen greater international sales than in its domestic market, selling over 100,000 abroad of February’s 190,000 produced, which really highlights the importance of exports to Chinese OEMs in what could be a weak year domestically. Connor Watts, Fastmarkets
EV demand weakness through the first quarter looks increasingly persistent, as both China and the US have seen sales fall relative to 2023 year-to-date so far. Albeit with the caveat of the Chinese New Year and it being another difficult month for volumes, BYD has seen greater international sales than in its domestic market, selling over 100,000 abroad of February’s 190,000 produced, which really highlights the importance of exports to Chinese OEMs in what could be a weak year domestically.
Connor Watts, Fastmarkets
US storage market evolves with policy shifts and infrastructure investmentsThe US storage market is undergoing significant policy and structural adjustments. Following the Supreme Court’s decision regarding tariff authority, the administration acted promptly to strengthen trade measures and implement initiatives such as the CHARGE Act, reflecting sustained attention on supply chains with connections to China. Concurrently, infrastructure investors remain strongly committed to energy storage, exemplified by BlackRock’s acquisition of AES, which highlights the growing recognition of grid-scale BESS as essential energy infrastructure. Large-scale storage is vital for supporting electrification, increasing data center demand, and enhancing grid resilience in the United States. Policy priorities now focus on promoting domestic manufacturing, decreasing dependence on Chinese supply chains, and gradually localizing critical components. Nevertheless, project economics in the near term continue to rely substantially on imported cells and equipment, presenting a sequencing challenge.
Middle East tensions threaten storage supply chains and battery material costsThe evolving geopolitical situation in the Middle East also adds a layer of uncertainty to the storage supply chain. Escalating tensions could affect energy prices, shipping routes, and insurance costs, with potential knock-on impacts for raw materials such as lithium, nickel, and aluminum. Higher oil and gas prices may temporarily improve the competitiveness of renewables and storage in certain markets, but they could also increase logistics and manufacturing costs. Any disruption to key maritime corridors would directly affect battery component trade flows between Asia, Europe, and the US, adding further volatility to project timelines and pricing.
Global ESS is entering a second phase characterized by policy fragmentation, localization pressure, and margin compression. In China, February’s Lunar New Year holiday has tightened near-term cell supply, with mainstream LFP 314Ah cells now facing lead times of more than 45 days. Cell pricing remains firm at above USD 53/kWh, reflecting stable domestic demand and constrained spot availability. While the US accelerates localization and Europe raises regulatory standards, China continues to anchor global supply. Short-term volatility is increasing, but structural demand remains intact. The next phase will reward players with integration capability, scale, and disciplined capital deployment ahead of consolidation. Walter Zhang, Fastmarkets
Global ESS is entering a second phase characterized by policy fragmentation, localization pressure, and margin compression. In China, February’s Lunar New Year holiday has tightened near-term cell supply, with mainstream LFP 314Ah cells now facing lead times of more than 45 days. Cell pricing remains firm at above USD 53/kWh, reflecting stable domestic demand and constrained spot availability. While the US accelerates localization and Europe raises regulatory standards, China continues to anchor global supply. Short-term volatility is increasing, but structural demand remains intact. The next phase will reward players with integration capability, scale, and disciplined capital deployment ahead of consolidation.
Walter Zhang, Fastmarkets
Upstream volatility drives January surge in global cell costsTotal cell costs rose sharply across all major chemistries in January, reversing the period of stability seen through most of 2025. The surge was driven primarily by renewed volatility in upstream raw materials, with lithium prices jumping on bullish speculative activity and nickel edging higher amid delays to Indonesia’s ore export quota announcement. These upstream shocks fed directly into cell manufacturing economics worldwide, lifting costs despite ongoing efficiency improvements at the plant level.
EU Industrial Accelerator Act aims to boost domestic battery manufacturingThe EU is preparing to release the first draft of its Industrial Accelerator Act, marking a significant step toward accelerating a domestic battery manufacturing ecosystem. Early indications suggest the framework will tie access to state support to stringent local content rules, most notably requiring automotive manufacturers to source at least 70% of EV components from within the EU. Draft provisions also outline specific material requirements, including mandating that 25% of aluminium and 30% of plastics used in car doors be produced inside the bloc. Whilst these measures reflect a step forward in developing a more sovereign industrial sector, member states remain divided on how to close the competitiveness gap: either leverage Chinese battery manufacturers for rapid scale-up or pursue a more assertive, Europe-first industrial strategy.
The battery sector has undergone a fundamental shift in priorities, moving beyond environmental considerations to become a matter of geopolitical strategy, economic security, and access to critical resources. Batteries are taking on a growing role in defence strategies. The conflict in Ukraine highlighted how the emergence of battery-powered drones has reshaped modern battlefield tactics. Where iron and oil once defined the foundations of military power, battery manufacturing is now becoming an essential component of national defence and security strategies as the world moves deeper into the 21st century. Dr. Luke Sweeney, Fastmarkets
The battery sector has undergone a fundamental shift in priorities, moving beyond environmental considerations to become a matter of geopolitical strategy, economic security, and access to critical resources. Batteries are taking on a growing role in defence strategies. The conflict in Ukraine highlighted how the emergence of battery-powered drones has reshaped modern battlefield tactics. Where iron and oil once defined the foundations of military power, battery manufacturing is now becoming an essential component of national defence and security strategies as the world moves deeper into the 21st century.
Dr. Luke Sweeney, Fastmarkets
In conclusion, the battery raw materials market continues to evolve at a breakneck pace, shaped by a complex interplay of geopolitical, economic, and technological factors. From the volatility in lithium and cobalt prices to the structural shifts in global supply chains and the rise of new players like India, the sector is navigating a period of profound transformation. Policy initiatives such as the EU’s Industrial Accelerator Act and the US CHARGE Act underscore the growing importance of localization and sustainability, while the increasing integration of batteries into national security strategies highlights their strategic significance.
As the industry faces both challenges and opportunities, adaptability, innovation and strategic foresight will be key for stakeholders to thrive in this dynamic landscape.
Ready to deepen your understanding of the battery raw materials markets? Stay informed about all the critical developments with Fastmarkets’ battery raw materials insights and prices.
Navigating lithium market volatility: ESS growth amid price swingsFrom mid‑January through early February, the lithium market was defined by futures‑driven volatility, sharp reversals in carbonate and hydroxide prices, and major divergence between ESS‑driven strength and NCM‑related weakness. Supply‑side tightness (particularly in hydroxide), shifting Chinese export‑rebate policies, and seasonal logistics constraints and a pronounced deterioration in spot liquidity ahead of the Lunar New Year further contributed to market instability. Despite short‑term volatility, medium‑term fundamentals remain supported, primarily by surging ESS installations.
January lithium surge eases as market corrects ahead of export policy shiftsLithium carbonate CIF CJK prices peaked at $20.4/kg, while hydroxide reached $19.6/kg, reflecting month-on-month gains of 57% and 62% respectively across the China Japan Korea (CJK) region. Spodumene CIF China prices also strengthened, climbing above $2,300/tonne by late January. However, this upward trajectory slowed in early February following a steep drop in salt prices. Although spot and GFEX futures markets later rebounded, participants largely attributed the mid-February uptick – bringing lithium carbonate to $18.2/kg, lithium hydroxide to $17.1/kg, and spodumene to $1,900/tonne – to the market correcting from January’s rapid declines rather than any fundamental shift. Meanwhile, battery and cathode manufacturers in China continue to advance shipments into Q1 ahead of export tax rebate changes scheduled for April 1, adding another layer of near-term demand.
The lithium market is expected to remain subdued in the third week of February during the Lunar New Year holidays. We await to see what level of price response begins in the latter stages of the month and into March, where OEMs are expected to continue to push material to the export market ahead of tax rebate changes on April 1. In the salts market, lithium carbonate is expected to remain in demand with strong forecast ESS demand post-holidays. Lithium hydroxide demand continues to see challenges, highlighted by Albemarle’s decision to halt processing at its Kemerton site in Australia. Rob Searle, Fastmarkets
The lithium market is expected to remain subdued in the third week of February during the Lunar New Year holidays. We await to see what level of price response begins in the latter stages of the month and into March, where OEMs are expected to continue to push material to the export market ahead of tax rebate changes on April 1. In the salts market, lithium carbonate is expected to remain in demand with strong forecast ESS demand post-holidays. Lithium hydroxide demand continues to see challenges, highlighted by Albemarle’s decision to halt processing at its Kemerton site in Australia.
DRC export quotas drive cobalt price surge amid supply constraintsCobalt prices rose further in January as the market tightened. The DRC, the world’s top cobalt miner, has imposed cobalt export quotas in an attempt to lift prices. While it has succeeded, exports have barely resumed due to the slow rollout of the infrastructure needed to control material outflows.
Delayed DRC exports tighten China’s cobalt supply in Q1It typically takes around three months for DRC material to reach China, its main export destination. The slow resumption of exports means very little material will reach China in Q1, further tightening the market.
The DRC’s quota system will squeeze supply in the next two years, but we expect the market tightness to be particularly acute in Q1 2026 since material from the DRC is unlikely to reach China during this period. Although the DRC has been successful in lifting prices via its supply control, the longer prices remain elevated, the greater the risk that the electric vehicle battery industry – the largest consumer of cobalt – will seek to minimize the cobalt content in batteries or move to cobalt-free chemistries. In the longer term, the DRC’s strategy risks damaging cobalt demand growth prospects. Olivier Masson, Fastmarkets
The DRC’s quota system will squeeze supply in the next two years, but we expect the market tightness to be particularly acute in Q1 2026 since material from the DRC is unlikely to reach China during this period. Although the DRC has been successful in lifting prices via its supply control, the longer prices remain elevated, the greater the risk that the electric vehicle battery industry – the largest consumer of cobalt – will seek to minimize the cobalt content in batteries or move to cobalt-free chemistries. In the longer term, the DRC’s strategy risks damaging cobalt demand growth prospects.
Nickel prices stabilize in higher $16,750-$18,750 rangeThe nickel cash price has shifted to a new trading range of around $16,750-$18,750 per tonne, up from around $14,000-$16,000 per tonne through 2025.
Indonesian supply controls drive nickel market rebalance expectationsThis increase in the trading range is due to expectations that the Indonesian government will seek to impose greater supply discipline on its nickel industry. This would involve stricter control of ore mining quotas and could potentially rebalance the market more quickly than anticipated.
2026 nickel quota pending, flexibility expected to meet market needsThe market is still awaiting the final total nickel mining quota for 2026. However, even once the final value is released, we expect some degree of flexibility to respond to market demands.
The nickel market has been oversupplied since 2022, due mostly to the growth in Indonesian production. The rise in prices will need concrete indications of Indonesian supply discipline if it is to be sustained. Although the Indonesian government seems more serious about controlling supply, the market still awaits the definitive ore quota level for the year. Olivier Masson, Fastmarkets
The nickel market has been oversupplied since 2022, due mostly to the growth in Indonesian production. The rise in prices will need concrete indications of Indonesian supply discipline if it is to be sustained. Although the Indonesian government seems more serious about controlling supply, the market still awaits the definitive ore quota level for the year.
Battery-grade manganese prices surge amid unexpected Q1 tightnessChina’s battery-grade manganese sulfate exw mainland China prices continued the late-2025 rally in January, with prices firming throughout the month. Expectations of a gradual slowdown in the market as we moved towards the holidays have not yet materialized, with the market tighter than is typical for Q1.
China’s HPMSM production peaks to meet surging demand China’s high-purity manganese sulfate production has remained relatively flat in December and January, with utilization rates of 51-54% at HPMSM sites. The last three months of production have been the strongest in China for several years. Production has ramped up to meet strong demand in Q4 2025 and early 2026, with higher-cost processing sites entering the market.
Export tax changes boost Q1 demand for battery-grade manganeseDemand for battery-grade manganese and other precursor materials has remained strong in January and early February. Changes to export tax rebates for cathode materials and lithium-ion batteries have driven a shift in demand into the first quarter, supporting manganese sulfate prices.
Strong manganese pricing through January and early February has highlighted the robust demand and tighter market conditions currently playing out in China. Despite some perceived weakness in the NCM market compared to LFP batteries and EVs, we have still seen OEMs in China rush to take advantage of the existing export tax rebate system ahead of changes from April 1. Rob Searle, Fastmarkets
Strong manganese pricing through January and early February has highlighted the robust demand and tighter market conditions currently playing out in China. Despite some perceived weakness in the NCM market compared to LFP batteries and EVs, we have still seen OEMs in China rush to take advantage of the existing export tax rebate system ahead of changes from April 1.
US trade ruling spurs regional premiums for graphite anode materialsThe final determination in the US International Trade Commission investigation into antidumping and countervailing duties on graphite active anode materials from China laid the groundwork for regional premiums that could support the development of the ex-China supply chain.
Grpahite market stagnates amid Lunar New Year lull in ChinaMarket activity in the dominant Chinese market remains slow, with prices in the graphite market mostly unchanged amid seasonally driven low levels of activity due to the Lunar New Year.
Trade barriers could disrupt ex-China graphite market in 2026While similar trends of low pricing and market oversupply are expected to drive the graphite market in 2026, as they did in 2025, the formation of trade barriers in the US and Europe does create the potential for volatility in the ex-China supply chain.
The USITC’s final ruling on antidumping and countervailing duties for graphite anode materials has created the foundation for meaningful regional premiums—opening the door for a more resilient ex-China supply chain. Market activity in China remains muted amid Lunar New Year seasonality and largely unchanged prices, while oversupply and low pricing are expected to persist across 2026. Still, the emergence of new trade barriers in the US and Europe introduces a new layer of uncertainty that could inject volatility into graphite markets outside China. Andrew Saucer, Fastmarkets
The USITC’s final ruling on antidumping and countervailing duties for graphite anode materials has created the foundation for meaningful regional premiums—opening the door for a more resilient ex-China supply chain. Market activity in China remains muted amid Lunar New Year seasonality and largely unchanged prices, while oversupply and low pricing are expected to persist across 2026. Still, the emergence of new trade barriers in the US and Europe introduces a new layer of uncertainty that could inject volatility into graphite markets outside China.
China’s black mass demand fuels two-tier global marketChina’s surge in black mass imports since August 2023 has driven record-high payables across Asia, as mainland buyers outbid regional competitors for high-purity, low-moisture material that meets strict import standards. This aggressive demand, supported by lower operating costs, tariff reductions, and new domestic recycling regulations, has created a two-tier global market and intensified competition for premium NCM black powder.
Malaysia’s e-waste ban tightens black mass supply, spurs local recycling Malaysia’s sudden, absolute ban on e-waste imports is set to disrupt feedstock availability for battery, aluminium, and copper recyclers that rely heavily on inbound material, potentially tightening black mass supply and driving up payables. While the move poses short-term logistical and cost challenges, it may also accelerate the development of domestic recycling capacity as regulated local collectors move to fill the supply vacuum.
Limited supply and rising demand are leading to soaring black mass prices. Julia Harty, Fastmarkets
Limited supply and rising demand are leading to soaring black mass prices.
Stellantis shifts focus from EVs to hybrids amid $26B write-downsStellantis CEO Antonio Filosa has announced that the company will be turning back from its EV push as it was causing the company to haemorrhage cash. Instead, the company will continue to produce petrol and hybrids for the foreseeable future. The move comes alongside the announcements that Stellantis faced write-downs totalling $26 billion, including scaling back investment in ACC and selling its 49% stake in NextStar Energy to its JV partner LGES for just $100. Stellantis had very few top-selling EV models throughout the group, focused within the Peugeot brand for midsize crossovers, while only the Jeep Avenger sells meaningful volumes within the SUV segment.
LGES repurposes NextStar facility for energy storage amid EV policy shiftsIn what has become a trend within the US market, LGES plans to convert its now wholly owned NextStar Energy facility in Ontario, Canada, to produce cells for energy storage systems instead of EVs as originally planned. The move signals LGES’s expectations for offtake within the region shifting towards ESS and away from EVs, owing largely to policy changes weakening incentives for electric vehicles and charging infrastructure buildout.
Weakening Chinese EV sales are a symptom of the country’s new focus on quality over quantity, as the government aims to reverse the current dynamic of exporting quality and selling quantity domestically. In adapting their current vehicle model offerings, OEMs will likely look at exporting old and non-compliant stock to international markets now that they aren’t competitive domestically. Connor Watts, Fastmarkets
Weakening Chinese EV sales are a symptom of the country’s new focus on quality over quantity, as the government aims to reverse the current dynamic of exporting quality and selling quantity domestically. In adapting their current vehicle model offerings, OEMs will likely look at exporting old and non-compliant stock to international markets now that they aren’t competitive domestically.
China’s ESS sector booms with 160% January sales surge amid VAT rebate phase-outSupported by robust domestic demand and the phased reduction of the ESS VAT export rebate (from 9% to 6% starting 1 April 2026, with full removal scheduled for 1 January 2027), 2026 is expected to remain a high-growth year for China’s ESS sector. Leading cell manufacturers are running at full production capacity to meet both domestic and overseas orders. Our channel checks suggest that January sales rose by over 160% compared with the same period last year.
US manufacturers pivot to ESS amid slowing EV sales growthMore manufacturers in the US are shifting or upgrading their EV production lines to focus on stationary storage since there are currently greater demand and clearer prospects in the ESS sector, such as AIDC. This change comes as EV sales growth slows, but utility-scale and commercial storage projects remain steady. Additionally, prismatic and pouch cell manufacturing equipment can be adapted easily. Lithium raw material prices have recently stabilized, making costs easier to predict for developers and integrators, which helps encourage new installations for the rest of the year. While this shift doesn’t mean that all production capacity will move from EVs to ESS, it shows growing supply-side readiness for storage solutions—potentially easing bottlenecks and boosting project deployments as more pipelines develop.
In 2025, the global ESS industry recorded another year of strong expansion, with total cell shipments estimated at around 600 GWh, approximately doubling year-on-year. Growth in China was underpinned by both policy support and sustained domestic demand, enabling Chinese suppliers to secure eight of the top ten positions in the global rankings. In the United States, a gradual reallocation of manufacturing capacity from EV batteries to stationary storage has emerged, reflecting comparatively clearer visibility in ESS pipelines, particularly those linked to AI-driven data centre power demand. Walter Zhang, Fastmarkets
In 2025, the global ESS industry recorded another year of strong expansion, with total cell shipments estimated at around 600 GWh, approximately doubling year-on-year. Growth in China was underpinned by both policy support and sustained domestic demand, enabling Chinese suppliers to secure eight of the top ten positions in the global rankings. In the United States, a gradual reallocation of manufacturing capacity from EV batteries to stationary storage has emerged, reflecting comparatively clearer visibility in ESS pipelines, particularly those linked to AI-driven data centre power demand.
Europe’s battery industry rebalances amid Northvolt collapse and ACC setbacksEurope has seen a major rebalancing of its battery manufacturing industry. As investors continue to lick their wounds from Northvolt’s collapse, the dream of rapidly building out Europe’s battery manufacturing capacity is being further jeopardised by ACC, a company backed by Stellantis, shelving plans to build gigafactories in both Germany and Italy. Meanwhile, Spain, Poland, and Hungary have continued to see massive Chinese investment, unabated by Europe’s reversal of a total ICE ban by 2035.
China’s cell makers max out capacity ahead of VAT rebate cutChina’s cell makers are operating at or above full utilisation, with reports that tier-one manufacturers are having to temporarily lease tier-two production capacity to meet demand. This has been spurred by cell producers racing to fulfil orders before the Chinese government cuts VAT rebates from 9% to 6% on April 1. The frenzied market activity has resulted in a scramble for tier-one batteries, contributing to tighter availability and upward pressure across downstream supply chains.
Volatile lithium prices have reignited interest in sodium-ion technology. Unlike the last lithium price spike, which caused a surge in sodium-ion interest in 2022/23, there have now been major leaps in gravimetric capacity. Whilst gigafactory production for sodium-ion is still being ramped up, a growing scenario is emerging in which sodium-ion’s cheaper, less volatile, and more geographically dispersed raw materials, combined with surging BESS demand driven by AIDC deployment, spur large-scale demand for sodium-ion cells. Dr. Luke Sweeney, Fastmarkets
Volatile lithium prices have reignited interest in sodium-ion technology. Unlike the last lithium price spike, which caused a surge in sodium-ion interest in 2022/23, there have now been major leaps in gravimetric capacity. Whilst gigafactory production for sodium-ion is still being ramped up, a growing scenario is emerging in which sodium-ion’s cheaper, less volatile, and more geographically dispersed raw materials, combined with surging BESS demand driven by AIDC deployment, spur large-scale demand for sodium-ion cells.
In conclusion, the battery raw materials market continues to evolve at a rapid pace, shaped by shifting policies, technological advancements, and dynamic supply-demand balances across regions. From the surging interest in sodium-ion batteries to the growing focus on energy storage systems and the challenges faced by Europe’s battery manufacturing sector, 2026 is already proving to be a pivotal year for the industry.
As global markets adapt to these changes, Fastmarkets remains committed to delivering timely insights and in-depth analysis to help stakeholders navigate this complex and ever-changing landscape. Stay tuned for our next update as we continue to track the trends shaping the future of battery raw materials.
Lithium prices soar amid supply strains and market uncertaintyLithium prices have staged a dramatic rebound, with spot battery-grade lithium carbonate on the seaborne market rocketing from around $11 per kg in early December to over $16 per kg by early January, and the rally shows no sign of abating. This explosive surge is not just a story of numbers but of mounting supply-side tension: persistent delays to the reopening of CATL’s Jianxiawo lepidolite mine, facility maintenance at other producers, and a scramble to secure inventories for long-term contracts have all combined to squeeze availability. The feverish price action has been further stoked by speculative trading, as bullish sentiment sweeps through the market. Yet, beneath the headline gains, the market is gripped by uncertainty—buyers and sellers alike are holding back, wary of being caught on the wrong side of the next move, leaving spot liquidity thin. We are observing a market where every rumor, policy shift, or operational hiccup could trigger the next major swing.
Spodumene prices surge, sparking potential Australian mine restartsSpodumene prices have mirrored lithium’s meteoric ascent, surging past $2,000 per tonne in January, a threshold not breached since October 2023, when spot battery-grade lithium carbonate was trading at $24 per kg. Critically, these elevated prices have shifted the economics for Australian producers, many of whom curtailed or suspended operations when prices slumped below $900 per tonne. If current price levels persist, a wave of Australian mine restarts is increasingly likely, as operators move to capitalize on improved margins. The timing and scale of these restarts will be pivotal: a rapid return of Australian spodumene, supplemented by additional African material, could ease market tightness and temper further price rises, but operational lead times may delay this. The key question is whether this price environment will trigger a decisive new phase of Australian supply and how quickly these restarts could rebalance a market currently defined by scarcity and volatility.
Lithium prices appear to have moved ahead of the fundamentals, propelled by speculative buying, bullish sentiment and a backdrop of heightened geopolitical risk. Yet we may also be finally witnessing demand catch up with the supply surge of recent years. The key takeaway is to brace for more volatility – this is a market where a single headline, project delay or policy shift can rewrite the outlook overnight. Paul Lusty, Fastmarkets
Lithium prices appear to have moved ahead of the fundamentals, propelled by speculative buying, bullish sentiment and a backdrop of heightened geopolitical risk. Yet we may also be finally witnessing demand catch up with the supply surge of recent years. The key takeaway is to brace for more volatility – this is a market where a single headline, project delay or policy shift can rewrite the outlook overnight.
Paul Lusty, Fastmarkets
Cobalt prices climb amid DRC export restrictions and looming deficitsCobalt prices continued to rise in December as the market adjusted to the new undersupplied market fundamentals. With the DRC, the world’s top producer of mined cobalt, restricting exports to 87,000 tonnes per year in both 2026 and 2027, the market will face deficits in both years.
Cobalt prices double year-on-year as export delays persistThe average December price for cobalt standard grade, in warehouse Rotterdam, rose by 3% compared to November’s average and was more than double its December 2024 average. Prices kept rising as it emerged that exports had been slow to resume, even though they had been permitted since mid-October.
The DRC’s quota system will squeeze supply in the next two years unless the country revises quotas higher. Because of the delay in publishing the framework under which quotas can be exported, there has been a delay in shipping material out of the DRC, which will leave the market particularly tight in Q1. Prices have therefore continued to rise, and they are likely to remain high for as long as current quota levels remain in place. Cobalt is mostly used in batteries, and the longer prices remain elevated, the more likely it becomes that EV manufacturers will seek to move to low-cobalt or cobalt-free chemistries, where feasible. This could slow demand in the medium term. Olivier Masson, Fastmarkets
The DRC’s quota system will squeeze supply in the next two years unless the country revises quotas higher. Because of the delay in publishing the framework under which quotas can be exported, there has been a delay in shipping material out of the DRC, which will leave the market particularly tight in Q1. Prices have therefore continued to rise, and they are likely to remain high for as long as current quota levels remain in place. Cobalt is mostly used in batteries, and the longer prices remain elevated, the more likely it becomes that EV manufacturers will seek to move to low-cobalt or cobalt-free chemistries, where feasible. This could slow demand in the medium term.
Nickel prices surge on fears of Indonesian mining quotesThe nickel cash price rallied aggressively toward the end of December due to the risk that Indonesia—the world’s top producer—would limit nickel ore mining quotas in 2026, even though quotas have yet to be announced.
Nickel prices rebound on Indonesian supply risk despite oversupplyAlthough the market remains in a state of structural oversupply, the risk that the Indonesian government could take a stronger stance and show greater supply discipline was enough to push the nickel price higher toward the end of the month. For the first three weeks of December, the price was below the $15,000 per tonne level, as it had been in November. However, in the last week of December, supply risk pushed the price higher, ending the month at close to $16,500 per tonne.
Uncertainty looms as 2026 nickel quotas remain unannouncedThere has not been any announcement of the final quotas for 2026. Indeed, in the absence of such a quota, PT Vale Indonesia has halted mining activity. It is only once these quotas have been announced that the market will have a clear view of possible supply levels.
The nickel market has been in a structural surplus since 2022, due to an oversupply of – mostly Indonesian – material. If the recent run-up in prices is to be sustained, then Indonesia needs to show supply discipline. However, the market still awaits the announcement of final 2006 quota levels. Olivier Masson, Fastmarkets
The nickel market has been in a structural surplus since 2022, due to an oversupply of – mostly Indonesian – material. If the recent run-up in prices is to be sustained, then Indonesia needs to show supply discipline. However, the market still awaits the announcement of final 2006 quota levels.
Manganese sulfate prices surge as buyers stock up ahead of Q1 slowdownChinese battery-grade manganese sulfate prices turned bullish in the second half of December as buyers looked to build stock ahead of the expected slowdown in manufacturing activity in Asia in Q1 2026. Firming sulfuric acid prices in China were also observed in the second half of December, likely supporting manganese sulfate price increases as well. Manganese sulfate exw mainland China prices ended the month at 5,900–6,200 yuan per tonne. Prices at the high end of the range reached levels not seen since March 2025.
China’s manganese sulfate output hits three-year high on strong battery demandChina’s high-purity manganese sulfate production continued to rise in November. Processing output in the country reached 26,200 tonnes for the month, the highest monthly production figure since November 2022. The continued growth in battery-grade manganese production has likely been driven by increased orders for Tier 1 battery producers’ products ahead of year-end.
China’s November manganese demand dips 2% MoM but soars 44% YoYChina’s monthly pCAM production stats showed a small decline in manganese demand in November. Total demand was 11,800 tonnes for the month, down 2% month-on-month but 44% higher year-on-year.
Looking ahead to the coming weeks and months, it is likely we won’t see too much further upward pressure on prices. Asian markets are heading towards the seasonal lull in demand and manufacturing activity in February as the Lunar New Year holidays begin. At the same time, there are concerns around what China’s EV demand outlook looks like in Q1 2026, with changes to subsidy schemes potentially leading to softening consumption of battery-grade manganese. Rob Searle, Fastmarkets
Looking ahead to the coming weeks and months, it is likely we won’t see too much further upward pressure on prices. Asian markets are heading towards the seasonal lull in demand and manufacturing activity in February as the Lunar New Year holidays begin. At the same time, there are concerns around what China’s EV demand outlook looks like in Q1 2026, with changes to subsidy schemes potentially leading to softening consumption of battery-grade manganese.
Natural graphite battery market faces ongoing challenges in 2026The battery segment of the natural graphite market is expected to continue facing many of the same challenges in 2026, with many Chinese producers operating below full capacity at the end of 2025.
China’s synthetic graphite production expands to meet growing EV and ESS demandSynthetic graphite producers in China are operating at full capacity with planned expansions in 2026. This is driven by performance characteristic preferences and relative cost parity with natural graphite, making synthetic anodes more attractive to both EV and ESS manufacturers.
Graphite flake market struggles amid weak steel industry demandGraphite flake faced a challenging end to 2025 as many steelmakers in China reduced production throughout the year, weighing on demand. This market overabundance is expected to linger through 2026, with few signs of improved demand from the steel industry.
The synthetic side of the market is gaining steam going into 2026, as its performance characteristics and current near-cost parity with natural materials make synthetic an increasingly attractive choice for battery makers. Meanwhile, natural graphite continues to struggle with weak battery demand and idle capacity. Still, the overall graphite market is working through an abundance of material that is weighing down prices and hurting investment prospects. Andrew Saucer, Fastmarkets
The synthetic side of the market is gaining steam going into 2026, as its performance characteristics and current near-cost parity with natural materials make synthetic an increasingly attractive choice for battery makers. Meanwhile, natural graphite continues to struggle with weak battery demand and idle capacity. Still, the overall graphite market is working through an abundance of material that is weighing down prices and hurting investment prospects.
NCM black mass payables hit record highs amid strong Asian demand and tight supplyOn 7 January 2026, NCM CIF South Korea black mass reached an all-time high of 87.5% for cobalt and nickel payables, driven by strong demand from China and Southeast Asia and a rally in battery metal prices. High-purity NCM black powder meeting China’s strict import standards saw payables exceed 100%, reflecting its higher metal content and limited availability. European supply remains inconsistent, while LCO black mass prices have risen amid Indian export restrictions. Overall, nickel and cobalt payables have climbed across regions, highlighting tightening supply and robust Asian buying interest.
China’s high-grade black power imports reach 405.6 tonnes amid trade data ambiguities China has documented imports of 405.6 tonnes of high-grade, production-scrap black powder since August 2025, though further shipments may have occurred but remain undisclosed. Ambiguities in HS code definitions mean some non-black mass materials may be included, distorting trade data. Notable shipments include 200 tonnes to Ningbo by Zhejiang Tianneng in October, 47 tonnes to Tianjin by CRRG, and earlier deliveries to Ningbo, Guangzhou, and Longnan. A confirmed 100-tonne cargo arrived in December for Zhejiang Tianneng Group from Southeast Asia.
Rising battery metal prices, high demand for black mass in Asia, and export restrictions in India & Europe have pushed global black mass payables to record highs, while persistent regulatory uncertainty and limited refining capacity continue to disrupt supply chains and reshape trade flows across the sector. Julia Harty, Fastmarkets
Rising battery metal prices, high demand for black mass in Asia, and export restrictions in India & Europe have pushed global black mass payables to record highs, while persistent regulatory uncertainty and limited refining capacity continue to disrupt supply chains and reshape trade flows across the sector.
China’s NEV sales surpass 60% penetration amid sluggish total vehicle marketPreliminary data from China’s CPCA indicates that NEV sales within the country surpassed 60% penetration for the first time, as retail sales hit nearly 1.4 million for December. This was partly a result of an uncharacteristically low number of total vehicle sales for December, with sales down 13% relative to December 2024. Overall, sales grew 7% year-over-year and 5% month-over-month.
US EV sales stumble in Q4 2025 amid subsidy cuts and economic pressuresThe US’s full-year EV demand picture is starting to take shape, as Q4 appears to have erased the EV sales growth achieved through the first three quarters of 2025, despite the chaotic regulatory environment. This can be largely attributed to the removal of consumer EV subsidies, alongside weakening macroeconomic conditions and consumer confidence. November saw 45% fewer EV sales relative to November 2024.
The first quarter of 2026 represents a reset following a strong year for EV sales globally, where the US and France were the only significant points of weakness amidst widespread strength elsewhere. Potential weakness in China following changes to subsidies could see volume EV sales struggle despite continued progress in other regions like Europe and other areas benefiting from competitively exported EVs from China. 2026 will be the year where Chinese companies truly establish footholds internationally. Connor Watts, Fastmarkets
The first quarter of 2026 represents a reset following a strong year for EV sales globally, where the US and France were the only significant points of weakness amidst widespread strength elsewhere. Potential weakness in China following changes to subsidies could see volume EV sales struggle despite continued progress in other regions like Europe and other areas benefiting from competitively exported EVs from China. 2026 will be the year where Chinese companies truly establish footholds internationally.
Lithium price surge spurs shift to sodium-ion batteries for EVs and ESSLithium prices have nearly doubled over the past two months, driving battery cell costs up by 15–20% to around $46–48 per kWh at the start of 2026. This sharp increase has renewed industry attention on sodium-iron battery technology as a viable alternative for both electric vehicles (EVs) and energy storage systems (ESS). Leading manufacturers, including CATL, are accelerating large-scale deployment of sodium batteries in 2026. As a highly price-sensitive sector, the ESS market is expected to be an early beneficiary of this shift. With its cost advantages, stable raw material supply, and improving performance profile, sodium-based technology is poised to play a pivotal role in the next phase of ESS development.
Global energy storage market shifts to market-drive modelsChina’s energy storage market is undergoing a rapid transformation—from policy-driven “solar-plus-storage” mandates to a more market-oriented model where standalone storage assets can monetize value through capacity-style payments and price arbitrage under increasingly flexible power-market rules. A similar investment rationale is now driving expansion across Europe, where batteries capture revenues from volatile electricity prices and ancillary-service markets. Against this global backdrop, Fastmarkets’ expectation that battery shipments will exceed 580 GWh in 2025 aligns with the industry’s broader trajectory: accelerating deployment of energy storage systems supported by clearer commercial signals, diversified revenue streams, and maturing regulatory frameworks.
In 2025, global energy storage system (ESS) shipments grew at an exceptional pace, achieving a near 90% year-on-year increase. China remained the primary driver of this expansion, supported by the widespread deployment of independent energy-storage plants and a rapidly maturing market structure. In the United States, manufacturers increasingly shifted their focus from EV batteries to grid-scale storage as federal EV tax credits phased out and demand for utility-scale ESS rose—marking a strategic supply-chain reorientation. Europe maintained steady growth in ESS deployment, while emerging markets such as Australia and the Middle East expanded rapidly under strong policy incentives and rising renewable-energy integration. Walter Zhang, Fastmarkets
In 2025, global energy storage system (ESS) shipments grew at an exceptional pace, achieving a near 90% year-on-year increase. China remained the primary driver of this expansion, supported by the widespread deployment of independent energy-storage plants and a rapidly maturing market structure. In the United States, manufacturers increasingly shifted their focus from EV batteries to grid-scale storage as federal EV tax credits phased out and demand for utility-scale ESS rose—marking a strategic supply-chain reorientation. Europe maintained steady growth in ESS deployment, while emerging markets such as Australia and the Middle East expanded rapidly under strong policy incentives and rising renewable-energy integration.
EU softens EV regulations, delays full ICE ban to 2035The EU has once again diluted its previously ambitious EV regulations. Instead of implementing a complete ban on ICE engines by 2035, the E.U. has decided to introduce a new category of small, affordable EVs and set an emissions reduction target of 90% by 2035. This is considered a significant win for automotive manufacturers and increases the likelihood that this legislation may be further weakened as we approach 2035.
US EV battery investments falter amid shifting political landscapeWith Trump’s America in full swing, U.S. car manufacturers have been scaling back investments in the battery space, as highlighted by Ford’s cancellation of its $6.5 billion long-term EV supply deal with LG. This decision will disappoint South Korean manufacturers, who were relying on the United States favouring them over China. In Europe, the shift from ICE to EV feels inevitable; in America, it increasingly seems like a matter of consumer preference.
The dilution of the EU’s ICE 2035 ban raises alarm bells for Europe’s ambition to build a home-grown EV sector. ICE’s incompatibility with CO₂ emission targets has been widely recognized for well over 15 years. Nevertheless, while China accelerated electrification and Tesla took bold risks, Europe’s car industry stagnated. Intentional or not, this has now left legacy manufacturers with few options other than to plead with policymakers for extensions and delays in EV implementation. Luke Sweeney, Fastmarkets
The dilution of the EU’s ICE 2035 ban raises alarm bells for Europe’s ambition to build a home-grown EV sector. ICE’s incompatibility with CO₂ emission targets has been widely recognized for well over 15 years. Nevertheless, while China accelerated electrification and Tesla took bold risks, Europe’s car industry stagnated. Intentional or not, this has now left legacy manufacturers with few options other than to plead with policymakers for extensions and delays in EV implementation.
Luke Sweeney, Fastmarkets
Fastmarkets’ January BRM market update highlights a dynamic and rapidly evolving battery raw materials market, shaped by surging lithium prices, regulatory shifts and geopolitical influences. Key trends include the tightening of cobalt and black mass supplies, nickel market volatility, and the growing appeal of sodium-ion batteries as a cost-effective alternative. Regional developments underscore the global nature of these changes, with China leading energy storage expansion, Europe grappling with diluted EV regulations, and the U.S. facing challenges in battery investment amidst shifting policies.
Together, these insights paint a complex picture of a sector navigating supply chain disruptions, technological innovation, and policy-driven transformations, setting the stage for a pivotal year ahead.