Core Lithium share price on watch amid $167m half-year loss and CEO exit

All eyes will be on this lithium miner tomorrow after it post a huge loss.

| More on:

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s Premium Investing Services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn More

The Core Lithium Ltd (ASX: CXO) share price will be one to watch closely on Wednesday.

That's because the lithium miner has released its half-year results after the market close.

a woman with her hands over her face splits her fingers over one eye so she can peep through them.

Image source: Getty Images

Core Lithium share price on watch

  • Revenue of $134.8 million
  • EBITDA loss of $11.5 million
  • Loss after tax of $167.6 million
  • CEO to exit

What happened during the half?

For the six months ended 31 December, Core Lithium reported revenue of $134.8 million. This reflects spodumene concentrate production of 49.5kt with sales of 54.1kt and lithium fines sales of 46.3kt.

Core Lithium reported a 75% decline in its spodumene concentrate realised price to US$2,098 per tonne and cash operating costs of A$1,926 per tonne.

Unfortunately, this meant that the company posted a loss for the six months. It reported an EBITDA loss of $11.5 million and a loss after tax of $167.6 million. This includes a non-cash impairment of $119.6 million and provisions for onerous contracts of $27.6 million.

CEO exit

In response to operational changes put in place as a result of its strategic review and the revised near-term path forward for the company, its CEO, Gareth Manderson, will step down.

Commenting on his exit, Core chair Greg English said:

Gareth joined Core at a difficult time: the Grants open pit mine was underperforming and the mine infrastructure was not complete. He joined to provide the leadership and skills required as a developer and operator.

He has delivered the Finniss project, established concentrate production, shipping and sales processes and developed the governance, practices and processes required of a listed mining company. [..] Gareth has made an outstanding contribution to the Company, and we wish him well in his other ventures.

Looking beyond lithium

With the lithium price tipped to stay lower for longer, Core Lithium has suggested that it may look beyond the white metal. It commented:

The Core exploration team is reviewing the local and regional prospectivity of the Company's lithium tenements and the potential of the Company's 100% owned gold, uranium and base metal projects.

The Company has received multiple inbound enquiries about the Napperby and Fitton Uranium Projects. Updates will be provided as the review continues and the exploration plan is finalised.

Outlook

The company has yet to make a decision on the restart of the Finniss Lithium Project. However, it will continue to process existing ore stockpiles to produce spodumene in the meantime.

As a result, it has reaffirmed its revised FY 2024 production guidance of 90,000 tonnes to 95,000 tonnes of 4.77% spodumene concentrate production and sales of 80,000 tonnes to 90,000 tonnes.

Though, that may not be enough spodumene to fulfil its obligations, which could have consequences for Core Lithium and its share price. Its report highlights the following:

The Group has offtake agreements with Ganfeng Lithium and Sichuan Yahua for the supply of lithium spodumene concentrate. Within these agreements, there are annual shipment quantities that Core Lithium is contractually obligated to meet.

Due to the suspension of mining at the Finniss operations, there is a possibility that Core Lithium may not meet this obligation. In respect of one of these agreements, if this obligation is not met, Core Lithium is obligated to pay the customer the difference between the price and the price the customer actually paid in procuring a replacement supply of spodumene concentrate.

Motley Fool contributor James Mickleboro has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia's parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

More on Materials Shares

A group of people gathered around a laptop computer with various expressions of interest, concern and surprise on their faces as they review the payouts from ASX dividend stocks. All are wearing glasses.
Resources Shares

Buy, hold, or sell? South32, Capstone Copper, and BHP shares

Let's see what the experts think.

Read more »

A man wearing a suit holds his arms aloft, attached to a large lithium battery with green charging symbols on it.
Materials Shares

PLS shares jump 320% in 12 months: Buy, sell or hold?

The lithium miner has flown from strength to strength over the past year.

Read more »

Business people standing at a mine site smiling.
Materials Shares

Morgans just placed buy ratings on these ASX materials stocks

These two stocks could be worth adding to your portfolio according to Morgans.

Read more »

Female miner in hard hat and safety vest on laptop with mining drill in background.
Materials Shares

Why Lynas could be one of the ASX's biggest winners again today

Lynas is gaining strategic value as rare earths tensions rise.

Read more »

Two workers on site discuss the next stage of this civil engineering job.
Materials Shares

Is takeover tension sending this ASX steel stock soaring?

Strong fundamentals and takeover speculation have pushed this share up 42%.

Read more »

Smiling worker in metal landfill.
Materials Shares

Another US milestone, another share price drop: What's going on with this ASX stock?

Metallium hits another US milestone, but shares slip again on Tuesday.

Read more »

A bearded man holds both arms up diagonally and points with his index fingers to the sky with a thrilled look on his face.
Materials Shares

Which ASX mining stock could rise 120% according to a leading broker?

Bell Potter thinks this mining stock could be seriously undervalued.

Read more »

Male building supervisor stands and smiles with his arms crossed at a building site with workers behind him.
Materials Shares

Down 25%! Is this resurgent ASX 200 stock a strong buy?

Analysts at Morgans see more than 60% upside ahead.

Read more »