The Wall Street Journal today reports that Toyota Motor Corporation secured access to a long-term lithium source in Argentina, outbidding potential Chinese buyers.
As lithium increasingly becomes an input into our transportation and energy industries, demand for the metal is going to skyrocket, as will the number of mining operations seeking to acquire and sell it, making the price about as volatile as the element.* If the auto/battery/lithium mining industrial complex is going to maintain any semblance of sanity there will need to be a hedge for producers and consumers of lithium. This is the same thing that happened with palladium, a metal used almost exclusively in the production of catalytic converters, when wild price swings pre-futures contract made establishing budgets and allocating funds close to impossible for automotive manufacturers. A listed futures contract will afford automakers a relative stability when it comes to protecting themselves. I'd put the over/under at about four years before a contract is listed on either the LME or the COMEX (or both). Any takers out there?
*As an unfortunate side effect, look for these sorts of chemical/financial volatility puns to be used in 100% of news stories related to lithium price movements.
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