Liontown Drops Again With Lithium Prices Pressuring Kathleen Valley

Liontown Drops Again With Lithium Prices Pressuring Kathleen Valley

July 8, 2026

SYDNEY, July 9, 2026, 07:04 AEST

  • ASX cash equities sat in pre-open at the dateline time. Normal trading is set to start just before 10 a.m. Sydney.
  • Liontown closed at A$1.465 on Wednesday, down 4.25%. Volume topped 70 million shares.
  • The stock slide hit even though there was no new operating update from the company. That shifted attention back to lithium prices and the Kathleen Valley ramp.

Liontown Ltd shares face renewed selling going into Thursday’s ASX trade, after falling 4.25% to A$1.465 at Wednesday’s close. The reversal adds to the slide in the lithium player. Google Finance listed the latest price as of 4:11 p.m. Sydney time on July 8, with the day’s range between A$1.44 and A$1.52. Volume was 70.63 million shares.

The timing is important because the ASX had not started continuous trading at the dateline. The exchange says its pre-open runs from 7:00 a.m. to 9:59 a.m. in Sydney, letting brokers place orders but with no matching on ASX Trade. Regular trading goes from around 9:59:45 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

Liontown didn’t report any fresh company news. The latest posts on its ASX releases page were admin securities filings from June 29. The last real investor update was from April 30 covering the March quarter, plus a presentation in May.

Australian resources lagged in a wider market pullback, with the S&P/ASX 200 closing 0.21% lower at 8,785.10 on Wednesday. The All Ordinaries finished down 0.28% at 8,979.30. Miners tracked commodity prices lower.

Lithium stocks took a hit too. Google Finance showed PLS Group off 3.29% at A$4.70, IGO down 3.61% at A$6.95, and Core Lithium losing 12.07% at A$0.26. The selling was broader than just Liontown.

Liontown is down roughly 29% over the past four weeks, but still up around 95% in the last year, data from Trading Economics shows. The shares have been a bet on turnaround, though quick selling hits when lithium sentiment slips.

Liontown gave bulls reason to stay interested after its latest operating update. The company reported its best financial quarter since starting production, with A$33 million in net cash flow, A$424 million in cash at the end of March, and 96,367 dry metric tonnes of spodumene concentrate output. Spodumene is a lithium ore used in making battery chemicals.

Managing Director and CEO Tony Ottaviano had said at the time that “Liontown is generating positive net cash flow” and called the company’s progress at the Kathleen Valley lithium project “genuine momentum.” Liontown also kept FY2026 guidance unchanged.

Kathleen Valley is still key to the story. Liontown calls it the country’s first underground lithium mine. The site is turning out spodumene concentrate for customers out of Western Australia’s Northern Goldfields.

The risk here isn’t minor. Liontown’s March-quarter realised price included management’s estimates for shipments where price periods hadn’t closed by quarter end, so the actual realised price could change. The company said unit operating costs climbed from the previous quarter. Expansion work is underway ahead of a final investment decision, or FID, on major capital plans.

The first hurdle for the stock on Thursday is clear: will buyers see Wednesday’s drop as just more pressure in the lithium space, or does this four-week slide push investors to question how much value Kathleen Valley should get before fresh operating data comes in?

Mateusz Ługowik

Mateusz Ługowik is a senior markets reporter at Bez-kabli.pl, specializing in technology stocks, artificial intelligence and global financial markets. A graduate of the University of Gdańsk, he previously worked in investment research and market analysis. His coverage helps readers understand the key trends, companies and innovations influencing investors worldwide.

Stock Market Today

  • How Australians Can Aim for $1 Million in Superannuation
    July 8, 2026, 8:02 PM EDT. Hitting $1 million in superannuation is possible for some Australians, but it depends on pay and how they contribute. Experts say three things matter most. Know what the $1 million target really means-it's more than the usual retirement standard in Australia and could guard against inflation or health costs. Use your income by boosting employer-paid super (12% of wages) and by salary sacrifice or after-tax contributions, staying inside the limits. Third, think about long-term growth: pick investments with the right risk for you, since shares have pushed super balances higher over time, and keep fees down to help build up savings.