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TIANQI LITHIUM CORP.
China flexes lithium dominance with plans for tech-export curbsThe government has proposed adding various technologies- some used for lithium refining and battery chemicals production — to its list of i...
Chinese premier promises more pandas and urges Australia to put aside differencesLi visited Adelaide Zoo, which has been home to China-born giant pandas Wang Wang and Fu Ni since 2009, before he was to have lunch at a re...
It’s too late to China-proof the lithium supply chainIn Chile, which trails Australia as the 2nd-biggest producer of lithium, Chinese money is also dominant.
Mining giants have underestimated the lithium waveA decade ago, the likes of lithium, cobalt and graphite were minor materials, affected less by electric vehicles than the markets for lubri...
Lithium producers Allkem, Livent to combine in $10.6 billion dealCombining U.S.-based Livent and Australia-based Allkem creates an industry powerhouse on four continents that executives hope will bring mo...
Lithium frenzy sees China ceramics hub refocus on battery metalsThe ceramics producers of Gao’an city in China’s Jiangxi province are a prime example. About 15% of the city’s plants have switched from ch...
Hong Kong's dry spell for IPOs set to endAlong with several other mid- to large-sized deals in the pipeline, they are poised to revive a dormant market where firms raised a paltry ...
China stocks close up as new energy shares boostThe blue-chip CSI300 index rose 0.1% to 4,885.75, while the Shanghai Composite Index gained 0.4% to 3,537.37 points.
Chinese bluechip stocks slip, Shanghai stocks inch higher as investors await PMI dataThe blue-chip CSI300 index fell 0.3% to 4,813.27, while the Shanghai Composite Index edged up 0.2% to 3528.15.
Australia shares fall on Covid-19 vaccine production halt, post sixth weekly jumpThe S&P/ASX 200 index fell 0.6% to close at 6,642.6, after slipping as much as 0.8% during the session. It had ended 0.7% lower on Thursday.
Base metals tumble as virus-related curbs deepen slowdown fearsBenchmark three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange (LME) was down 6.3 per cent at $4,509 a tonne.