Quick reading
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LIT rose 34% in 2026, a gain roughly three times that of the S&P 500, as lithium carbonate prices stopped falling to low cash cost levels after three years of oversupply pressure.
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ALB has jumped 182% over the past year from a deeply distressed base, while five-year LIT holders barely broke even against SPY’s 79% return.
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Three signals determine the next stretch: spot lithium prices on the Guangzhou Stock Exchange, monitoring of US policy on LAC shareholding, and sales of electric vehicles in China and Europe.
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A year ago, lithium was the trade that no one wanted. He Global X Lithium and Battery Technology ETF (NYSEARCA:LIT) had been bleeding for the better part of three years, headlines about EV demand were a graveyard and the consensus was that oversupply from Chinese converters would keep lithium carbonate prices pinned for the entire decade. Then it broke. LIT has returned 28.4% year-to-date through June 4, 2026, rising from $64.86 at the end of last year to $83.28. The fund hit $88 in early May (where the circulating 34% holder comes from) before giving back some over the last month. Either way, the S&P 500 returned 11% over the same stretch. LIT is performing at about 2.5 times the pace of the broad index in a year when the broad index is doing well.
Arithmetic, with the awkward part included
If you invest $10,000 in LIT on the last trading day of 2025, you have about $12,840 today. If you bought it a year ago, on June 4, 2025 at $36.94, that same $10,000 is now worth about $22,550, a 125% return. That’s the kind of number that produces screenshots. The number that exists is also important because the starting point was a multi-year minimum. The five-year yield is still only 25.1%, which tells you everything you need to know about the depth of the hole. Investors who bought LIT in 2021 spent four years underwater before this rally brought them back to roughly parity. The same money in SPY returned about 79% over those five years. So the proposition that “the LIT crushed the S&P” is true for the last twelve months and false for the last five. Both things matter.
What really did the job?
Three things converged and the order matters. The first is that lithium carbonate prices stopped falling. After the 2022 peak, Chinese spot prices spent two and a half years falling as new Australian and African supply hit the market faster than EV demand could absorb it. By the end of 2025, the marginal ton of lithium was being produced at or below cash cost for high-cost converters, which is the condition that ends commodity bear markets. China’s Guangzhou Futures Exchange intervened in November 2025 to curb speculative trading after a rally, which sounds bearish and was actually the opposite signal. Regulators do not intervene in markets that are dying.
The second factor is politics. In November 2025, reports emerged that the Trump administration was considering an equity stake in Lithium Americas as part of a renegotiation of the terms of the Department of Energy loan, and Lithium Americas shares rose more than 90% in response. Whatever you think about governments purchasing mining stocks, it works as a floor price signal for the entire national supply chain. LIT has the names that benefit. Albermarle (NYSE:ALB), one of the fund’s largest weightings, is up 17% so far this year and 182% over the past year, the latter from a deeply distressed base of $58.66 last June.
The third factor is that the demand situation stopped getting worse. Industry estimates referenced this spring put global lithium consumption growth at about 20% annually through 2026, driven by electric vehicles, grid-scale storage, and a combination of battery chemistry (LFP, sodium ion) that is expanding rather than contracting the addressable market. Add to that the price of WTI crude oil at $95.96 per barrel as of June 1, 2026, off a December 2025 low near $55, and the relative cost argument for electrification becomes easier to make at a board meeting.
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The case of the bear that aged poorly and the one that didn’t
It’s worth reading Seeking Alpha’s December 2025 article that rated a 60% year-to-date rally driven by “sentiment and trade war headlines rather than fundamental profitability,” issued a sell rating, and warned that “the lithium trade has become overextended.” LIT then proceeded to add another leg. The bad age part of that thesis was time. The part that still applies is the valuation. You will no longer be buying distressed battery names at multiples. The 30% downside risk that was always within LIT is still there, which is why the fund returned about 6% in the last month and about 5% in the last week alone.
What to watch from here
Looking ahead comes down to three observable things, each of which a retail investor can actually track. First, lithium carbonate spot prices on the Guangzhou Futures Exchange. If they stay above the cash cost floor that formed in late 2025, the producer earnings story has another year to go. If they turn around, LIT turns around with them. Second, monitoring US policy on domestic lithium. He Lithium Americas (NYSE:LAC) shareholding was the main catalyst. Whether it becomes a model for other names (or quietly stagnates) determines how much of the policy premium currently in these stocks is real. Third, electric vehicle unit sales, particularly in China and Europe, which together drive the demand curve that justifies the supply response. A reacceleration there validates the 20% growth projection. Not a flat line.
The honest reading is that the easy money in LIT has already been made. The fund tripled its low because it was priced in for the death of an industry that turned out not to be dying. The next leg, if there is one, requires lithium prices to continue rising to real demand growth rather than a supply scare, and requires the political tailwind to continue blowing. The setup is intact at a much higher starting price, which changes the expected outcome even if the direction remains the same. If you missed the ending, you still have the story. What you missed was the part where it was cheap.
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