These Discounted Lithium Stocks Can Be a Great Bet on EVs

 | Oct 14, 2023 06:40

Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) may be the trendy stock, but what about lithium stocks?

It is almost set in stone that governments worldwide will push out gasoline-powered vehicles. The European Union (EU) has set a 100% zero-emission car sales starting from 2035. California joined the trend with the same deadline. Even sooner, the UK has set a 2030 deadline.

The gasoline-to-EV trend is perhaps the most telling in Norway. This oil-rich country has the highest percentage of EV sales globally, having broken the record in 2022, with nearly 80% of new car sales in the electric category.

For stock investors, the trend outlines a new resource resurgence. Companies in charge of extracting lithium for car batteries are poised to become the new oil barons.

By 2025, global lithium supply is set to outpace demand, according to BMI, Fitch Solutions research division. In their report, China alone, the world’s largest lithium processing nation, will have a 20.4% YoY lithium demand up to 2032, compared to only 6% supply growth.

The pressing question is, which companies are best positioned to keep up with the rising lithium demand? But before getting into that, let us remind ourselves why we are seeing lithium stocks decline this year.

h2 Lithium Stock Dip Despite Forecasted Demand?/h2

Lithium demand may be forecasted to outpace supply in the long run, but global inflation has done much to deplete consumer resources. With excess US savings returning to pre-lockdown levels, it is no wonder Tesla had to cut EV prices multiple times this year aggressively.

Additionally, EVs still essentially belong in the luxury car category, averaging at $53k per car as of September 2023. This is why hybrids continue to outsell EVs this year, at 1.4 million vs 1.2 million respectively, per GlobalData. And why both Toyota (NYSE:TM) and Ford (NYSE:F) are doubling down on hybrids instead.

Combined with recessionary concerns, investors have turned to selling off risky assets such as lithium stocks. In September, global lithium-ion cell prices dropped under $100 per KW/h for the first time in two years.