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Ganfeng Chairman’s Forecast Sparks Lithium Price Surge in China



China’s lithium market strengthened sharply on Monday (November 17) after Ganfeng Lithium (OTC Pink:GNENF,HKEX:1772) Chairman Li Liangbin said at a domestic industry conference that demand for the key battery metal could grow by as much as 40 percent in 2026.

The most-traded lithium carbonate contract on the Guangzhou Futures Exchange rose 9 percent that day and moved near its upper limit, marking its strongest close since June 2024.

Li’s comments, first reported by financial news outlet Cailian and later shared by Reuters, also included a projection that lithium carbonate prices could reach 200,000 yuan if demand accelerates as expected.


Traders said the reaction from the lithium price shows how much weight Ganfeng carries in a market that has been quick to react to any sign of stronger consumption after years of oversupply.

Chinese lithium carbonate prices are already up more than 17 percent this month on improving sentiment in the energy storage sector and expectations that demand for stationary batteries will grow through 2026.

CATL restart drives lithium volatility

China’s lithium market is also seeing support from the delayed restart of Contemporary Amperex Technology’s (CATL) (SZSE:300750,HKEX:3750) Jianxiawo mine in Yichun.

The mine normally produces about 65,000 metric tons of lithium carbonate equivalent a year, roughly 6 percent of global supply. However, it has been shut down since August after its operating permit expired.

CATL is reportedly making progress at getting the mine back online, but no exact date has been given.

The shutdown has spilled into global markets as well. In September, Australian lithium stocks fell sharply on the back of signs that CATL’s restart could be approaching.

Oversupply still weighing on lithium market

Beyond China, the broader lithium market has struggled with imbalance throughout 2025.

Prices spiked in July and August before easing again in September, with talks of potential supply cuts by Australian miners creating short-lived rallies despite strong inventories and growing production.

“The nascency of the lithium market means that it is prone to be led by sentiment,” Fastmarkets’ Claudia Cook wrote earlier this year, noting how futures activity has repeatedly drifted from fundamentals.

Oversupply remains the defining theme. Global mined output has jumped 192 percent since 2020, swelling inventories faster than even robust electric-vehicle demand can absorb.

While electric vehicle sales topped 17 million units in 2024 and are expected to exceed 20 million this year, production growth, including a 22 percent rise in mined supply in 2024, has kept the market in surplus.

Analysts have warned that the imbalance in the lithium sector could persist into the next decade unless mine delays, project cancelations or unexpectedly strong demand intervene.

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