Rio Tinto confirms talks to buy Arcadium Lithium — but not the price

Sal de Vida lithium ArcadiumArcadium Lithium's Sal de Vida lithium project in Argentina. (Image courtesy of Allkem Ltd; formerly Galaxy Resources.)

Rio Tinto (NYSE: RIO; LSE: RIO; ASX: RIO) has made an approach to buy Arcadium Lithium (NYSE: ALTM; ASX: LTM), the two sides confirmed on Monday, following market speculation over the weekend, and as the sector begins turning its attention back to growth.

The move would position Rio as one of the world’s largest lithium miners, behind only U.S.-based Albemarle (NYSE: ALB) and Chile’s SQM (NYSE: SQM). The acquisition would take Rio Tinto from no significant lithium production to owning operating lithium mines in Argentina and Australia, plus processing facilities in the U.S., China, Japan and the U.K. Its customer base would include major names, such as Tesla, BMW and General Motors.

Rio Tinto is already a top producer of another coveted battery metal, copper, and has set as goal to produce 1 million tonnes of the metal annually within the next five years.

Arcadium was created in January from the merger of Philadelphia-based Livent and Australia’s Allkem. Its shares have fallen since, dragged by declining lithium prices, which in turn is a result of weaker demand from electric vehicle (EV) makers and Chinese oversupply.

On the news of Rio’s approach, Arcadium shares went ballistic, rising almost 46% on Monday in Sydney at A$6.09 each. In New York, the stock shot up 60% in pre-market trading, but pared some of those gains later to trade 30% at US$3.08 apiece as of 8:00 am local time. That leaves the American lithium miner with a market capitalization of US$3.3 billion.

In a release, the company confirmed Rio’s approach, and said it wouldn’t comment further unless “there is news to share.”

BMO analyst, Joel Jackson, noted the announced deal has been part of market rumours for years. “Many investors believe that Arcadium (i.e., the Allkem/Livent merger) was completed to shake out interest from suitors like Rio,” he wrote.

While the parties did not disclose financial details, media reports have pegged the transaction value at US$4 billion – US$6 billion. “In our view, this figure would value Arcadium more like a mining company than a specialty chemicals firm, assuming a mid-cycle price range of US$18,000–$19,000 per tonne of lithium carbonate equivalent (LCE), average selling price (ASP),” noted Jackson. 

Battery ambitions

Over the past six years, Rio has been expanding its footprint in the battery market. In 2018, it reportedly attempted to buy a US$5-billion stake in Chile’s SQM, the world’s second largest lithium producer. 

In April 2021, the world’s second largest miner kicked off lithium production from waste rock at a demonstration plant located at a borates mine it controls in California. 

The following year, it paid US$825-million for the Rincon lithium project in Argentina, which has reserves of almost 2 million tonnes of contained lithium carbonate equivalent, sufficient for a 40-year mine life. 

The company plans to develop a battery-grade lithium carbonate plant at Rincon with an annual capacity of 3,000 tonnes and has earmarked US$350 million to invest in the project.

It is also trying to revive one of its biggest lithium projects, the proposed US$2.4 billion Jadar mine in Serbia. Rio had its mining licence revoked in 2022, following widespread protests against the proposed mine on environmental concerns.

The mining giant won a small, but key battle in July, as Serbia reinstated Rio Tinto’s licence to develop it, but the company will have to secure approvals to move towards production at the site.

With projected production of 58,000 tonnes of refined battery-grade lithium carbonate per year, Jadar s expected to be Europe’s biggest lithium mine.

The operation could supply enough lithium to power one million electric vehicles and meet 90% of Europe’s current lithium needs.

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