JPMorgan has upgraded Lithium Americas Corp. (LAC.US) from "Underweight" to "Neutral" with a $5 price target, citing that the stock has corrected to reasonable levels following significant volatility. Analyst Bill Peterson noted that after a sharp rally driven by U.S. government investment, the shares have retreated but now appear fairly valued.
Peterson highlighted that Lithium Americas' profitability should emerge as the Thacker Pass Phase 1 project advances and derisks, with further upside expected toward the end of the decade from Phase 2 development and improving lithium market fundamentals. He reiterated Thacker Pass as a flagship U.S. lithium asset, supported by low-cost debt financing and a strong offtake agreement with General Motors (GM.US).
The recent pullback, according to Peterson, partly reflects shifting U.S.-China geopolitical rhetoric under the Trump administration and China's removal of export restrictions on certain critical minerals, easing supply concerns. Meanwhile, lithium prices have held up better than expected, with JPMorgan’s metals and mining team now forecasting a supply deficit from 2025—earlier than the prior 2029 estimate—due to stronger-than-anticipated EV and energy storage demand.
Peterson expects Lithium Americas' stock to remain range-bound until project development catalysts emerge, with some linkage to underlying lithium prices.