Rangebound lithium prices ahead as Jiangxi permits set floor and ceiling

CATL has announced its 40ktpa Jiangxi-basedJianxiawo mica mine, idled since late August, could receive the permits required to restart sooner than the market had anticipated.
The shift in signalling is notable. Just last week, market consensus had hardened around the likelihood of a prolonged suspension amidst concerns overprovincial-level regulatory clampdowns. This latest announcement by CATL points to expectations of an earlier return.
Despite the change in tone, CATL has yet to disclose a firm timeline. The announcement appears to be aimed more at tempering upward price momentum than providing operational certainty, suggesting sentiment management rather than scheduling.
This outcome reinforces Benchmark’s core view: Jiangxi should be understood on a project-by-project basis, rather than as a province-wide clampdown. At the same time, CATL’s signalling of an earlier restart adds clarity for market participants, creating a price floor and a ceiling that leave lithium trading rangebound into Q3 and Q4 2025.
Project-level divergence still critical
Differences between Jiangxi’s mines remain a key driver of market sentiment. Jiuling (Huaqiao Dagang) and Yongxing stand out as facing heavierregulatory scrutinythan CATL, requiring more paperwork and approvals. These slower timelines and increased regulatory interactions make them especially influential, since any progress, or lack thereof, will weigh more heavily on supply perceptions than other sites.
It is this concentration at the project level, rather than any province-wide clampdown, that continues to shape market pricing. Jiuling’s progression through the regulatory process therefore remains the critical watchpoint for Q4 2025 and Q1 2026.
Trading band: floor and ceiling defined
Spot lithium pricesare unlikely to revisit previous lows of ~$600/t SC6. That floor is reinforced by a seasonal “Golden September/Silver October” uptick in demand, the structural support of marginal costs, and the discipline from Australian producers in managing output. In addition, regulatory frictions in Jiangxi embed a paperwork premium across the market, even where production is not directly curtailed.
On the other side of the curve, upside remains capped. Resilient Australian spodumene output continues to flow steadily, while incremental cargoes from Nigeria are supplementing seaborne feedstock. These additional shipments are increasingly visible in the tender market and effectively substitute for any absence of Chinese material, preventing rallies driven by Jiangxi-related uncertainty from gaining too much traction.
Policy, supply and demand together now delineate a visible trading range. On the floor, stricter supervision and documentation requirements embed an uncertainty premium. On the ceiling, pragmatic approvals, stable Australian flows and substitution from Nigeria blunt the scope for spikes. The overall impression is one of rangebound pricing: firmer than the lows, but capped as additional flows smooth through into Q4 2025.
Forecast implications
Benchmark’s Q2 2025 forecast already assumed CATL maintained sufficient feedstock to cover operations during the suspension. This implied a limited impact on annual output should October resumption be confirmed. On this basis, the latest announcement does little to alter the annual balance outlook.
More broadly, balances remain oversupplied in Q3, consistent with the position in Q2. The main factor influencing prices remains paperwork friction and feedstock delays, rather than a genuine loss of operating capacity. Against this backdrop, Benchmark’s Q3 2025 update is set to lift the effective floor modestly, reflecting resilient seasonal demand and embedded paperwork premia, while leaving the forward curve essentially unchanged.
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