
Core Lithium Ltd (ASX: CXO) is back in focus after another sharp sell-off.
The lithium producer’s shares are down 9.82% today to 25.3 cents, placing it among the biggest fallers on the ASX. The move extends recent weakness, with the stock now down almost 10% over the past month.
However, Core Lithium shares are still up more than 180% over the past year, which underlines just how volatile lithium stocks can be.
So, what is driving today’s drop?
Why Core Lithium shares are under pressure
The recent sell-off appears to be driven by a mix of technical factors and renewed weakness across the lithium sector.
After rallying strongly into late 2025, Core Lithium failed to hold above the 30-cent level. Once that support broke, selling pressure accelerated. Short term traders appear to be taking profits after the stock’s huge run over the past year.
From a technical perspective, momentum has clearly weakened. The relative strength index (RSI) has been trending lower and is now moving toward oversold territory. At the same time, the share price has slipped toward the lower end of its Bollinger Band range, which can signal selling pressure may be easing.
Key support sits around 25 cents. A break below that level could open the door to further downside, while resistance is now clustered between 29 and 31 cents.
Lithium prices have pulled back again
The broader lithium market has also lost some momentum.
Lithium carbonate prices in China have retraced from recent highs, easing back toward CNY 151,000 per tonne. While prices are still well above levels seen earlier in 2025, the pullback has reminded investors that the lithium recovery remains uneven.
Supply concerns, shifting demand expectations, and policy changes in China continue to drive sharp moves in pricing.
The bigger picture for Core Lithium
Core Lithium operates the Finniss Lithium Project in the Northern Territory, one of the few Australian hard rock lithium operations with direct access to export infrastructure via Darwin Port.
That strategic positioning has helped underpin the stock’s strong performance over the past year. However, the market remains cautious about near term earnings, costs, and lithium price volatility.
For long-term investors, the key question is whether lithium prices can stabilise at higher levels as electric vehicle demand continues to grow through 2026 and beyond.
Foolish Takeaway
Core Lithium’s sharp fall has pushed the share price back toward a level where buyers have stepped in before.
Big price swings are likely to continue, especially while lithium prices keep moving around. For long-term investors, this pullback may be worth keeping an eye on, but caution is still important in a sector this unpredictable.
The post One of the ASX’s biggest losers today. What is happening at Core Lithium? appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.
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More reading
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Motley Fool contributor Aaron Teboneras 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.
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