Green Rush

Wild swings in critical mineral prices have a root cause: relatively small supply

March 16, 2024 Matthew Watson Season 1 Episode 1
Wild swings in critical mineral prices have a root cause: relatively small supply
Green Rush
More Info
Green Rush
Wild swings in critical mineral prices have a root cause: relatively small supply
Mar 16, 2024 Season 1 Episode 1
Matthew Watson

There is a disconnect between policy makers desire to go green and the amount of critical minerals needed to make it happen, noted Matt Watson, Founder, Precious Metals Commodity Management LLC. 

On Thursday Watson recorded an episode of Green Rush with guest Paul Harris, Kitco correspondent.

To compound the problem is that the current supply base for these markets are small, resulting in large price swings. 

Lithium is a notable example: the metal hit a staggering $80,000 per tonne at its peak consequently crashing near 90% at the start of this year. Commodities are cyclical, but critical minerals have seen the patterns accelerated due to new markets and elevated demand. 

"These are relatively low volume markets," said Harris. "Somebody's going to open a new gigafactory or somebody is going to bring a new mine on stream and that's going to flood the market with surplus capacity, so the price is going to crash—rinse and repeat." 

Show Notes

There is a disconnect between policy makers desire to go green and the amount of critical minerals needed to make it happen, noted Matt Watson, Founder, Precious Metals Commodity Management LLC. 

On Thursday Watson recorded an episode of Green Rush with guest Paul Harris, Kitco correspondent.

To compound the problem is that the current supply base for these markets are small, resulting in large price swings. 

Lithium is a notable example: the metal hit a staggering $80,000 per tonne at its peak consequently crashing near 90% at the start of this year. Commodities are cyclical, but critical minerals have seen the patterns accelerated due to new markets and elevated demand. 

"These are relatively low volume markets," said Harris. "Somebody's going to open a new gigafactory or somebody is going to bring a new mine on stream and that's going to flood the market with surplus capacity, so the price is going to crash—rinse and repeat."