China Lithium Ore Market

China Lithium Ore Market Remains Weak, Putting African Lithium Exporters Under Pressure of Stockpiles & Insufficient Orders

Analyst: James Zhao

Chief Executive Officer (CEO) @ ETD (HK) Co., Ltd

 

The Chinese lithium raw material market, as the world’s largest importer and lithium processing hub, continues to weaken, with sluggish buying sentiment. This has directly left African lithium ore miners and exporters facing widespread challenges: mounting inventories, insufficient new orders, and declining bargaining power, as the global lithium supply chain shifts firmly into a buyer-driven market.

1. Weak Demand in China; Lithium Refiners Adopt Cautious Purchasing

Domestic lithium producers maintain low operating rates, focusing mostly on depleting existing inventories and fulfilling only essential small-batch orders, with little appetite for largescale bulk purchases.

A slowdown in downstream sectors including EVs and batteries, combined with ongoing inventory destocking across the supply chain, has led Chinese lithium refiners to universally push for lower prices, smaller volumes, and extended payment terms. Trading activity has remained thin, putting continuous downward pressure on prices.

High inventories at Chinese ports, ample spot availability, and expanding domestic lithium mining and micabased production capacities have further reduced reliance on highercost overseas ore — hitting Africansourced material particularly hard.

2. Rising Lithium Supply from Africa; Exporters Suffer Stockpile & Cash Flow Stress

Africa has emerged as a major source of incremental lithium supply, but its rapidly rising output has clashed sharply with weak Chinese demand. Large volumes of lithium ore are piling up at mines and ports, with longer waiting times for shipment.

  • Severe shortage of new orders
    Chinese buyers have cut back on longterm contract volumes and raised bargaining thresholds. Smaller miners and traders struggle to secure stable, sufficient orders, forcing them to accept spot deals at discounted prices.
  • Intensified inventory and cash flow pressure
    Sustained production without effective offloading ties up large amounts of capital. Coupled with high local operating, logistics, and compliance costs, tight cash flow has become a common pain point for African lithium miners.
  • Tighter export regulations add to difficulties
    Some African nations are tightening raw ore exports and promoting domestic processing. Miners without supporting downstream facilities face export restrictions and higher compliance costs, pushing them to discount stock for quick liquidity.

3. Prices Fall Further; African Suppliers Lose Bargaining Power

Under the dual pressure of weak Chinese demand and loose global supply, lithium concentrate spot prices have trended lower, squeezing margins for highercost African miners, with some grades approaching breakeven levels.

Chinese buyers now hold pricing power. To ease inventory and cash flow stress, African miners are often forced to accept lower prices, more flexible payment terms, and faster delivery schedules.

Compared with more established Australian supply, African ore generally offers fewer advantages in grade consistency, logistics reliability, and regulatory stability, further eroding its bargaining position in a buyer’s market.

4. Market Outlook: Weakness to Continue; Buyer Control Unchanged

In the near term, Chinese lithium refiners are expected to maintain low operating rates, destock, and stay cautious on procurement. With comfortably loose global lithium raw material supply, the market is set to remain weak.

African lithium exporters will continue to face slow offloading, scarce orders, and depressed prices. To accelerate cash collection, cutting prices to move volume remains the most likely path.

The global lithium ore market has clearly entered a sustained buyerdominated phase. With stable demand and inventory advantages, Chinese buyers are in a strong negotiating position, with ongoing downward pressure on prices reaching mineside suppliers across Africa.