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Tight supply to underpin China graphite market in 2023

  • Spanish Market: Battery materials, Metals
  • 23/12/22

Chinese graphite flake prices are at historic highs. And supply is likely to remain tight in the new year, given a swiftly expanding downstream anode material industry and rapid growth of the new energy vehicle (NEV) industry.

Prices for 94pc graphite flake have been assessed at 5,200-5,800 yuan/t ($743-829/t) ex-works since 28 November — the highest since Argus assessments began in October 2018.

China's average domestic graphite flake price was Yn5,097t ex-works in 2022, up by 32.3pc from 2021, according to Argus assessments.

The flake price was pushed to a record high by tight supply and winter stockpiling by spherical graphite and anode material producers.

Output in Heilongjiang province — China's largest flake production hub — fell in January-May because of environmental inspections, Covid outbreaks and low temperatures. Production was again lower in November and December because of a lack of heating.

Consumer demand has increased this quarter as spherical graphite and anode material producers have started to restock.

Tight flake supply is expected to persist in the first quarter of 2023, but to ease after Heilongjiang producers resume production. New anode material capacity will continue to support demand for graphite flake feedstock in 2023.

Fast anode capacity expansion

BTR New Material — China's largest lithium-ion battery graphite flake anode material producer — is building a 200,000 t/yr anode material plant at Dali city in southwest China's Yunnan province. The 50,000 t/yr first phase is due on line in 2023.

The firm expects global demand for anode materials used in lithium-ion batteries to increase to 2mn t in 2025 from less than 1mn t/yr at present.

Another key anode producer, Ningbo Shanshan, is working to raise capacity and secure more market share. It launched the first phase of a 100,000 t/yr anode materials and graphitisation plant in Sichuan in August, and is due to launch the first phase of a 200,000 t/yr anode materials plant in Yunnan in 2023.

Shanshan says its overall anode material capacity hit 180,000 t/yr in 2022, up from 120,000 t/yr in 2021. It is targeting 300,000 t/yr in 2023.

Another major producer, Putailai, is expected to the launch the 10,000 t/yr first phase of an anode material plant in Sichuan in 2023. It expects anode material sales to have reached 150,000t in 2022, up from 97,242t in 2021.

Other anode producers — including Shangtai Technology, Zhongke Electric, Guangdong Kaixjin and XFH — are also building plants that are expected to launch in 2023 and 2024.

New graphite flake capacity

To cope with the anode material industry's swift expansion, graphite flake producers have been adding capacity.

Jixi Northeast Asia Mineral Resources is building a 100,000 t/yr graphite flake plant that is on track to launch in 2023.

The country's largest metal mining firm, China Minmetals, is building a production complex in Hegang city, with a designed production capacity of of 6mn t/yr of graphite flake ore, 200,000 t/yr of refined flake powder, 50,000 t/yr of spherical graphite, 50,000 t/yr of high-purity graphite and 50,000 t/yr of flake anode materials. This is also due to start up 2023.

BTR New Material is building a plant in Luobei county in Hegang city the northeast Heilongjiang province that will be able to produce 400,000 t/yr of graphite flake and 200,000 t/yr of spherical graphite and anode materials. The first phase — 200,000 t/yr of graphite flake and 50,000 t/yr of spherical graphite and anode materials capacity — will be launched in 2023.

China will continue to exempt NEVs from its vehicle purchase tax in 2023 to support industry development, boost uptake and help reduce emissions.

Argus expects global EV sales to reach 31mn in 2032 — driven by Chinese and European adoption — up from 6.23mn last year. This will probably boost demand for power batteries and battery metals such as cobalt, lithium, nickel, manganese and graphite.

Argus expects global natural graphite demand to more than double by 2027 — to 3.1mn t from 1.4mn t in 2022 — driven by demand from the NEV sector, which is expected to grow at a compounded annual rate of 34pc over the same period.


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13/01/25

Cliffs still seeks US Steel, pledges no closures

Cliffs still seeks US Steel, pledges no closures

Houston, 13 January (Argus) — Cleveland-Cliffs chief executive Lourenco Goncalves said today that he remains open to buying US Steel, promising to keep all of the acquired assets open. Goncalves said Ohio-based Cliffs still wants to buy Pennsylvania-based US Steel and would invest in the company's assets. "Of course, we are going to keep [US Steel mills] open," Goncalves told reporters on Monday. "We are going to make them bigger, we are going to make them better, we are going to produce more." His comments come 10 days after President Joe Biden blocked Japan-based Nippon Steel's agreement to buy US Steel for $15bn, citing national security concerns. Nippon had committed to invest $1.3bn in US Steel's mills and to not cut any of US Steel's production for 10 years without government approval. Cliffs tried to buy US Steel for $54/share with half paid in cash and half in company stock before US Steel agreed to go with Nippon's $55/share all-cash offer. Goncalves promise to not close any acquired assets comes as the US steel market remains oversupplied , according to market sources. Goncalves said he cannot make a bid for US Steel until the company and Nippon cancel their merger agreement. He also dismissed antitrust concerns over Cliffs owning all US iron ore mines and all US blast furnace capacity. A combined company would have Cliffs running the mining side of the business and US Steel running the steelmaking operations, he said. A US Steel-Cliffs merger would have 32.1mn short tons (st)/yr of flat rolled raw steel capacity, in addition to plate making and seamless tube production. Goncalves did not say how he would finance such a purchase. Cliffs had $3.8bn in liquidity as of 30 September, including $39mn of cash, according to a third-quarter presentation. US Steel had $4.05bn in liquidity in the same period, of which $1.77bn was cash. Nippon is trying to buy US Steel. Both companies have sued Biden and others in the government over the denial, and filed a separate lawsuit against Cliffs, Goncalves and United Steelworkers (USW) International president David McCall, who endorsed a takeover by Cliffs. By Rye Druzchetta Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Mexico’s industrial output up 0.1pc in November


13/01/25
13/01/25

Mexico’s industrial output up 0.1pc in November

Mexico City, 13 January (Argus) — Mexico's industrial production edged up 0.1pc in November, as gains in autos and other manufacturing offset weaker construction, national statistics agency Inegi said. Mexican bank Banorte described the monthly increase as "rather small," noting it followed a 1.1pc decline in October and was largely driven by base comparison effects. The bank added that the overall industrial outlook remained "fragile." Manufacturing, which represents 63pc of Inegi's seasonally adjusted industrial activity indicator (IMAI), increased by 0.7pc in November, though it failed to fully recover from a 1.7pc drop in October. Transportation manufacturing, a key subsector accounting for 12pc of the sector, rose by 3.8pc after a steep 4.3pc decline the prior month. Despite recent volatility, Mexico's auto sector achieved record annual light vehicle production in 2024, reaching 3.99mn units. Yet, automaker association AMIA warned of potential challenges in 2025 because of economic uncertainty, which could affect investment and demand. Mining, which makes up 12pc of the IMAI, increased by 0.1pc in November following a 1.1pc decline in October. Growth was driven by a 41.4pc jump in mining-related services, while oil and gas output fell by 2.4pc, marking a fifth consecutive monthly decline for hydrocarbons. Construction, representing 19pc of the IMAI, contracted by 1.8pc in November after modest gains of 0.2pc in October and 1.1pc in September. As industry eyes potential policy shifts under US president-elect Donald Trump, Banorte projected a weak start to 2025 for Mexico's industrial output. But it expects momentum to build as government spending on priority infrastructure projects "moves more decisively." By James Young Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Lithium prices unlikely to recover in 2025


13/01/25
13/01/25

Lithium prices unlikely to recover in 2025

London, 13 January (Argus) — Prices for lithium carbonate equivalent (LCE) are unlikely to recover this year, according to market participants, owing to high inventories and Chinese overcapacity. While the vast majority of firms have either suspended or trimmed production at costs above Argus -assessed prices (see graph) , a number of other factors have weighed on price rises, including redundant Chinese lithium refining capacity, inventories of low and mid-grade concentrate and end-of-life LFP batteries. Chinese lepidolite, African low-grade ores and Brazilian tailings are "not immune" to low prices, according to supply chain consultantcy SC Insights. Prices are currently far below highs of $80,000/t in late 2022, although not at record lows by historical standards. "We have put our lithium plant in Zimbabwe on ice for now, margins are just too tight," a southern Africa-based producer said. The market could start to recover in the second half of 2026 as carmakers turn increasingly towards lower-cost lithium iron phosphate (LFP) batteries, SC Insights said. Between 2025 and 2026, major carmakers will start "socialising the intensions of using more LFP and LFMP [lithium iron manganese phosphate]", with it especially vital that LFMP producers "react early and offer a cost-competitive solution in CAM/LIB [cathode active material/lithium-ion battery] spaces". SC Insights forecasts that global annual LCE production will tip over 2.5mn t of LCE by 2030 (see graph) , from just over 1mn t last year, based on the adoption of these newer battery chemistries. Buildout of this supply will depend, SC Insights said, on the proposed restriction of CAM/LIB technology by China. The buildout of Argentinian lithium production could be a key factor in 2025, according to SC Insights, after global mining giant Rio Tinto announced last October that it would buy Arcadium Lithium. Argentinian president Javier Milei and Rio Tinto held a meeting in December 2024 and although it is unclear what the results of that meeting were, the relationship between Rio Tinto and the Argentinian government could be important for the lithium market this year. Argentina holds the third-largest reserves of lithium at 3.6mn t behind Chile and Australia, and the second-largest pool of resources at 23mn t, behind Bolivia, according to the US Geological Survey in January. By Chris Welch Cost of production, lithium carbonate equivalent (LCE) Lithium carbonate equivalent (LCE) production t Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

US added 256,000 jobs in December


10/01/25
10/01/25

US added 256,000 jobs in December

Houston, 10 January (Argus) — The US added 256,000 nonfarm jobs in December, reflecting a robust labor market that may prompt the Federal Reserve to keep borrowing costs higher for longer. Analysts had expected gains of about 160,000 jobs for December. The gains last month followed 212,000 more jobs in November, which were downwardly revised by 15,000, the Labor Department said Friday. Job gains in October were revised up by 7,000 to 43,000 jobs. The CME's FedWatch tool today showed 97.3pc probability Fed policy makers will keep the target lending rate unchanged at 4.25-4.5pc at the next Fed meeting at the end of the month, up from 93.6pc on Thursday. FedWatch shows nearly 60pc probability of no change through the May meeting, up from about 45pc Thursday. Unemployment edged down to 4.1pc in December from 4.2pc the prior month. Payroll employment gains averaged 186,000/month in 2024, for total gains of 2.2mn jobs. That was down from 251,000 jobs/month in 2023, for total gains of 3mn jobs that year. Health care added 46,000 jobs in December, retail trade added 43,000 jobs, government jobs rose by 33,000, social assistance increased by 23,000, and leisure and hospitality added 43,000 jobs. Construction added 8,000 jobs in December. Manufacturing lost 13,000 jobs and mining and logging lost 3,000 jobs. Transportation and warehousing jobs grew by 9,600. Average hourly earnings grew by an annual 3.9pc following 4pc growth in November. By Bob Willis Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Eurofer requests steel import duty, quota changes


09/01/25
09/01/25

Eurofer requests steel import duty, quota changes

London, 9 January (Argus) — The European steel association Eurofer has requested a reduction in the safeguard quota volumes and a higher duty on material above quotas amid the ongoing measures review, according to partner at law firm Van Bael & Bellis Yuriy Rudyuk. The reduction in the quota volumes is to reflect the decrease in steel demand in the bloc. Eurofer data shows apparent steel consumption has decreased nearly 15pc between 2017 and projected 2024 volumes. The association is looking for the safeguard tariff to increase to 32-41pc from the current 25pc, Rudyuk said. In addition, a 15pc cap to countries' access to "other countries'" quotas is being requested — this mechanism already applies to the hot-rolled coils (HRC) and wire rod quotas. This would be particularly impactful for the hot-dipped galvanised quotas, which have been typically dominated by Vietnam. The association would also like for more country specific quotas to be introduced, for no residual volumes to be carried over, and for no new developing countries exemptions. Currently, developing countries who are members of the WTO with small historical supply to the bloc are exempt from the safeguards. Eurofer did not answer a request for comment. The EC is currently inviting users and producers of steel to submit a questionnaire for the ongoing measures review by 10 January. By Lora Stoyanova Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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