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Lithium Related Media Articles, page-110

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    How to lose money: One part lithium and one part envy

    “Pssst! Hey, over here.

    “I’ve got a great deal for you. Can’t lose. But hurry … the easy money won’t last long.”

    It’s never quite that obvious, of course, but that’s the inference. And it’s worse when other people are already (apparently) making a fortune. As super investor Charlie Munger once said: “It’s not greed that drives the world, but envy.”

    And the rabbits are off and running. Again.

    The above could have been written at almost any time in modern history.

    Start with a plausible idea. Show how big that idea could become, then point to the money that other people are making.

    So far, so good. That could describe housing. Amazon shares. Our banks. Berkshire Hathaway shares – all real, long-term, money makers.


    But then there are the bubbles, involving the complete suspension of disbelief – or perhaps just overriding envy and greed.

    What makes bubbles is a genuine kernel of an idea, blown out to prices of plain silly proportions.


    'How big?"


    Unfortunately for many investors, this isn’t only the stuff of ancient history.

    In 2015, materials market disrupter graphene – in layman’s terms, a single layer of graphite atoms, apparently – was supposed to be the "Next Big Thing."


    Headlines like “WA's Talga Resources hopes to capitalise on graphene boom” and “Graphene to disrupt commodity demand” were written. It was, apparently, going to be huge.

    However, interest soon peaked in April, 2015, before quickly fading. The wonder material has since fallen off investors’ radars.


    More recently, speculation moved has on to another mineral – lithium.


    Let’s go through the list. Plausible idea? Check. How big it could get? Check. Money being made? How about Galaxy Resources going from 14 cents a share in 2015 to $4.24 last year. Or Orocobre, up from $1.36 to $7.24 in the same timeframe?

    Now back to our "How big" question. The answer, of course, is – or was – electric cars.

    The more cars Tesla made, the more excited the lithium bulls became.

    Yes, those references are in the past tense. Since the 2018 highs, the shares of both Galaxy Resources and Orocobre have halved.

    Shareholders let reason get swamped by greed. They let envy – and a rapidly rising share price – suck them in.


    Someone made money from lithium stocks but it wasn’t those who, at the peak of the enthusiasm in 2018, decided they couldn’t sit back while others were making money.

    Maybe lithium does become the new wonder material. Or maybe battery technology moves on.

    Maybe a lot more lithium is needed in the coming decades. And, in all likelihood, more mines and more miners pop up to satisfy the rising demand, keeping a lid on the commodity price.

    If I was a betting man, I’d put my chips on rising demand matched by rising supply. That means prices are unlikely to skyrocket and stay high forever.

    However, one thing for sure, just like nickel in the 1970s, graphene in 2015 and lithium today, there’ll be another Next Big Thing right around the corner … just waiting to take half of your investment away.


 
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