
Cobalt Holdings bets the battery metal's fortunes have turned: Andy Home
LONDON, May 29 (Reuters) - The price of cobalt has fallen so far over the last couple of years that even Congo's artisanal miners have given up on the battery metal.
They have been swept aside by a wave of production from the Democratic Republic of Congo's (DRC) formal sector and a secondary flood of metal from Indonesia.
The market was over-supplied for the third consecutive year in 2024 even though global demand exceeded 200,000 metric tons for the first time.
Metals investor Cobalt Holdings is betting that the worst is over.
The company is aiming to raise $230 million from an initial public offering in London the majority of which it will use to buy 6,000 tons of physical cobalt from Glencore (GLEN.L), opens new tab.
Chief Executive Jake Greenberg believes the purchase from Glencore, the first of several, will be "at or near a low point in the cycle", according to the company's registration filing.
Greenberg helped launch Yellow Cake (YCA.L), opens new tab, which offers investors a physical uranium play, and Cobalt Holdings is a similar vehicle for punters wanting to ride the cobalt cycle.
It's likely to be a bumpy ride and the longer-term bull thesis hinges both on whether the Congo, and to a lesser extent Indonesia, can restrain supply and on whether cobalt can maintain its position as a critical new energy input.
The DRC government's imposition of a four-month export ban in February is a positive sign that the world's largest cobalt producer has woken up to the fact it is producing too much.
Cobalt has a history of boom-and-bust pricing as super-strong rallies such as those in 2018 and 2022 generated an artisanal supply response.
Not this time.
Congo's informal sector saw output drop to a historic low last year, both in absolute and relative terms, according to analysts at Benchmark Mineral Intelligence (BMI).
Rather, it was China's CMOC Group (603993.SS), opens new tab which caused the supply shock, more than doubling production to 114,000 tons, above both guidance and assumed nameplate capacity at its TFM and KFM mines in the DRC.
The output surge continues unabated. The company reported first-quarter output of 30,414 tons, up 21% year-on-year.
That material is stuck for now as the government decides what it will do when the export ban expires in June.
But any decision "will inevitably imply a strict limitation of exports in whole or in part until market balance is reached with regard to the supply and demand of cobalt", according to Patrick Luabeya, head of the government's strategic metals authority.
Congo's apparent readiness to address its over-production has dispelled some of the cobalt blues, boosting the price to $16 per pound from a 10-year low of $10.
The market is now on tenterhooks as it awaits Kinshasa's next move.
But if the world's largest producer is prepared to limit exports or production, the market may have found a price floor, an elusive concept for a metal that is largely produced as a by-product of either copper or nickel.
Cobalt demand grew by a robust 14% year-on-year in 2024, driven by the metal's usage in electric vehicle (EV) batteries, according to BMI's annual market report commissioned by The Cobalt Institute.
The bull case for the metal rests on EV battery demand continuing to expand to the point that cobalt usage starts outstripping production some time around the turn of the decade.
BMI expects market surpluses to shrink going forwards, even without any production curbs in the DRC, with a structural supply deficit emerging "from at least the early 2030s".
However, cobalt's share of the EV battery market is in flux as Chinese EV producers pivot to battery chemistries that don't use any cobalt at all.
This is also true of the fast-growing energy storage sector, which is dominated by lithium-iron-phosphate (LFP) batteries.
The good news is that Western automakers are still heavily committed to cobalt-chemistry batteries and may become more so as China tightens export controls on LFP technologies.
But cobalt's fortunes remain in significant part dependent on the global battle to produce ever more efficient and powerful batteries. Some of them will contain cobalt, others will not.
Cobalt Holdings is not the only entity looking to scoop up cobalt at bargain-basement prices.
China's state stockpiler has been doing the same. BMI estimates the National Development and Reform Commission received around 16,600 tons of cobalt in 2024, up from 7,200 tons in 2023.
That reduced last year's supply surplus from over 50,000 tons to a still substantial 36,000 tons.
While China is well stocked, the West isn't, even though just about every country classifies cobalt as a strategically important metal, not just for its use in batteries but also in the form of super-alloys for aircraft manufacturing.
Cobalt Holdings' plans to accumulate what amounts to a Western strategic stockpile is an interesting development in the broader competition between the West and China for access to critical minerals.
It helps loosen China's mine-to-market grip on the cobalt supply chain and simultaneously offers a hedge against future disruption in a supply chain which is highly concentrated geographically.
However, it remains to be seen how long investors will have to wait to see the cobalt cycle once again turn from bust to boom.
There is a lot of cobalt around right now and there still will be even after Cobalt Holdings takes another 6,000 tons off the market.
The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
23 minutes ago
- Reuters
France's Eramet says it will work with Gabon despite manganese export ban
PARIS, June 2 (Reuters) - French miner Eramet ( opens new tab, the main shareholder in Gabon-based manganese mining firm Comilog, said it will aim to safeguard the 10,460 Gabonese jobs sustained by Comilog and Comilog railway transport unit Setrag, despite Gabon's announcement of an export ban on manganese starting in 2029. Eramet said it "takes note of the Gabonese government's intention to ban crude manganese exports from January 1st, 2029. This move is described as part of the country's stated ambition to strengthen its industrial base, initiated by H.E. President Brice Clotaire Oligui Nguema and his Government". It said it acknowledged the government's move and, as the main co-shareholder in Comilog, will continue to work with the authorities "in a spirit of constructive partnership and mutual respect". In August 2023, Eramet temporarily halted manganese mining operation following a military coup that ended 56 years of rule by former President Ali Bongo. In April 2025, Gabon's Constitutional Court confirmed that coup leader Brice Oligui Nguema won the oil-rich Central African nation's presidential election. In October 2024, Eramet sharply cut 2024 production targets for its manganese mine in Gabon - the world's biggest - citing a downturn in the manganese market. Eramet's Comilog subsidiary processes some manganese, which is mainly used to produce carbon steel, locally in Gabon but mostly exports its mine production as ore.


Daily Mail
3 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Outrage as taxpayers foot the bill to help accused Aussie drug smuggler as he faces the death penalty in Bali after he was allegedly caught with 1.8kg of coke
Outrage has been sparked after it emerged taxpayers are set to foot the bill for assistance offered to an Aussie facing the death penalty in Bali. Former News Corp editor David Penberthy took aim at Aussies who attempt to smuggle drugs into Indonesia following the arrest of Queenslander Lamar Ahchee. The 43-year-old son of former Queensland Senior Constable Les Ahchee was arrested in Bali last Thursday after he was allegedly caught collecting two parcels sent from the UK. About 1.8kg of cocaine was allegedly hidden inside two Lindt chocolate boxes, each containing 54 individual packets with 8.3g of cocaine each. The former tech manager originally from Cairns in Far North Queensland has allegedly tested positive for drugs while in police custody. Lamar Ahchee's lawyer, Edward Pangkahila, told reporters his client firmly denied dealing drugs, but conceded he was a 'drug addict'. 'Lamar has been set up by someone called "Boss",' Mr Pangkahila said, referencing a stranger in England who allegedly sent the Lindt boxes. 'He was told to collect the package, but he actually didn't know what the package was. He thought it was a normal package.' The quantity of cocaine Ahchee is accused of trying to smuggle into Indonesia, with an estimated street value of $1.1million, puts him over the threshold for the death penalty. The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) has confirmed it is offering consular assistance to an Australian in Bali. Despite the harsh penalties the Aussie is facing, Penberthy believed many Australians would prefer Ahchee be left to his own devices than shoulder his bill. 'There are gigantic yellow billboards in every Indonesian airport featuring a large image of a gun and warning: "This country executes drug dealers",' he wrote in the Sunday Mail. 'Nothing too subtle about that.' The journalist used prior cases of Australians caught smuggling drugs into Indonesia, like the Bali Nine, to highlight the 'presumptuousness' of 'taxpayer-funded assistance'. 'I never saw any polling on the question but my hunch is that most Australians wouldn't have much cared if the Bali Nine actually remained in jail in Bali for the rest of their lives,' he said. 'Lamar Ahchee has become the latest Aussie to put his hand up for consular assistance. 'Maybe I've had a compassion bypass. Maybe you don't want your government to leave you high and dry by withholding any assistance before you've even been found guilty. 'But [if] you have been found guilty, I think many Australians struggle to understand our unyielding generosity on behalf of all these halfwits who are incapable of working out what the gun is alluding to on those big yellow billboards.' Ahchee's lawyer said his client was 'very upset and stressed' at the prospect he could face the death penalty if he is found guilty. He called on police to track down the person who allegedly set up his client. 'If we can get this guy, we will find out the whole story here,' Mr Pangkahila said. Bali Police Chief Inspector General Daniel Adityajaya alleged the chocolate boxes arrived in Indonesia on May 12. When the packages arrived at the Renon Main Post Office, customs officers at Ngurah Rai Airport scanned them and suspected they contained narcotics. Officers and the Bali Regional Police Narcotics Directorate organised a controlled delivery as part of their investigation. They allege the first package came from Runwell, east of London, and was addressed to 'Alex and Julie' in Kuta Utara, near Canggu. The second was allegedly sent from Braintree, a town east of London, to 'Dave Jones' in the same region. The following day, police alleged Ahchee asked a driver to collect the packages from the post office. They met at a restaurant on May 22, and the Australian businessman allegedly took the packages back to Canggu. Ahchee was then arrested by the Bali drug squad and allegedly suffered several injuries while resisting arrest. They allege he offered almost 50million Indonesian rupiah, about AU$4700, to receive and distribute the drugs. Ahchee has been charged with three drug offences, including importing drugs. Originally from Cairns, Ahchee has been living in Bali 2017. He worked in hospitality and had stepped down as the general manager of Canggu restaurant Brick Lane Bali in November after eight months. His online profiles revealed he worked as the director and co-founder of tech groups in Jakarta and Bali from 2019, as well as previously for marketing firms in Sydney.


Reuters
3 hours ago
- Reuters
Indonesia's trade surplus shrinks to lowest in 5 years
JAKARTA, June 2 (Reuters) - Indonesia booked a trade surplus of around $160 million in April, the lowest since April 2020, amid a surge in imports, data from the statistics bureau showed on Monday. The country had recorded a $4.33 billion surplus in March. Imports jumped 21.84% on a yearly basis to $20.59 billion, with capital goods rising the most. The median forecast in a Reuters poll was for a rise of 7.75%. Exports rose 5.76% in April from a year earlier to $20.74 billion, matching the median forecast of analysts polled by Reuters. The bureau is due to release May inflation and other economic indicators later on Monday.