Sydney, June 9, 2026, 07:07 (AEST)
Liontown Limited shares faced more selling Tuesday, starting the ASX session below water after ending the last session down 6.14% at A$2.14. That’s a sizable drop for the lithium stock, though it’s still up roughly 36% so far this year. Shares have slipped 11.57% in the past five sessions, market data show.
Australian stock trading is catching up now after the ASX cash market was shut on June 8 for the King’s Birthday holiday, leaving no Monday session to react to the last move. Tuesday is the first regular local trading day since Friday’s selloff.
Lithium’s rebound isn’t running in a straight line. The next trade in the stock arrives as Trading Economics data showed lithium carbonate prices in China at 163,750 yuan per tonne on June 8, up 0.46% for the day but still down 16.13% in the past month. Lithium carbonate is a key pricing yardstick for battery materials, and its moves are watched by investors in hard-rock miners like Liontown.
Liontown shares turned lower last week. The stock ended at A$2.50 on both Monday and Tuesday before falling to A$2.42 Wednesday, A$2.28 Thursday and finishing Friday at A$2.14. Friday’s turnover hit 23.5 million shares, topping earlier days in the week.
Lithium stocks took a hit. Google Finance’s related-stock screen had PLS Group down 3.75%, IGO trading 3.02% lower and Core Lithium off 8.47% on the last quote. This wasn’t stock-specific—ASX lithium names fell together.
Liontown didn’t post any new catalyst that stood out on the current release schedule. The latest on the ASX was its Macquarie Australia Conference deck from May 5 and the March-quarter docs from April 30.
Liontown’s Kathleen Valley ramp-up in Western Australia remains the key story. In its March-quarter report, the company reported A$33 million in positive net cash flow and A$424 million cash at the end of the quarter. It sold 83,912 dry metric tonnes of spodumene concentrate, which goes into battery production. Managing Director and CEO Tony Ottaviano said, “Liontown is generating positive net cash flow” and called operational performance “strong.”
Next week looks light on disclosures, leaving traders to watch the price moves. Liontown’s website shows June-quarter numbers coming July 28 and full-year FY26 results due Aug. 31. That gives a few weeks until the next official update.
Still, the risks are spelled out. Reuters quotes Benchmark Mineral Intelligence saying the timing of CATL’s Jianxiawo lithium mine restart in China is a big swing factor for prices. BNP Paribas says prices have disconnected from fundamentals. If supply comes back faster or EV demand stays weak, Liontown’s rally faces a tougher path.
A$2.14 is holding for now. If things open steady, it looks like Friday’s trading is about locking in recent gains. A deeper drop would shift attention to lithium prices and raise questions about whether buyers are willing to pay more for Kathleen Valley before the numbers for the June quarter land.