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PLS Group Ltd (ASX: PLS) shares came under heavy pressure in Monday afternoon trade, sliding around 5% to $5.60.
The move extends a weak patch for the lithium producer, with the stock now down about 11% over the past month. That stands in sharp contrast to the broader market, with the S&P/ASX 200 Index (ASX: XJO) up roughly 2% over the same period.
Even so, PLS remains one of the ASX’s standout long-term performers, up 33% year to date and an extraordinary 302% over the past 12 months.
So why are PLS shares going backwards lately?
Lithium sentiment turns lower again
PLS sits at the centre of the global lithium cycle. That means its share price moves closely with spodumene and lithium carbonate pricing, which swing sharply with shifts in supply and demand expectations.
Today’s decline reflects renewed softness in lithium sentiment. Investors are once again questioning whether the market is still dealing with structural oversupply.
Global production has ramped up aggressively in recent years, while electric vehicle demand growth has cooled from earlier expectations. At the same time, the system is still working through elevated inventory levels built up during the boom.
When lithium sentiment weakens, the price of PLS shares almost always follows, even without any company-specific news.
Profit-taking after huge run
The selling is not isolated. Other lithium and battery materials stocks typically move in the same direction when sentiment turns.
The broader ASX resources sector has also been choppy, adding to the pressure. In softer market conditions, investors tend to rotate out of high-beta commodity names first, and lithium producers sit right at the centre of that trade. That rotation can easily amplify intraday moves, even when fundamentals remain unchanged.
PLS has also been volatile for months. After strong rallies driven by rebounds in lithium pricing, the stock often pulls back when momentum fades.
That’s the nature of cyclical commodities. Traders chase upside during rallies and exit quickly when sentiment shifts. That “hot money” effect can turn a normal trading day into a sharp 5% move.
What matters next for PLS shares
In the short term, PLS will focus on one of its key growth projects, P2000 at Pilgangoora. According to a release issued last week, PLS has approved early spending on the project, which it describes as the world’s largest independent hard-rock lithium operation.
Longer term, the key drivers for PLS shares remain unchanged: lithium pricing, electric vehicle demand growth, and supply discipline across the industry. They will determine the next major move for PLS shares.
The post PLS shares drop 5%: What’s driving the move? appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.
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Motley Fool contributor Marc Van Dinther 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.