

The Pilbara Minerals Ltd (ASX: PLS) share price is under pressure on Wednesday.
In afternoon trade, the lithium minerâs shares are down over 3% to $5.19.
Why is the Pilbara Minerals share price dropping?
The weakness in the Pilbara Minerals share price today appears to have been driven partly by a broker note out of Citi this morning.
According to the note, in response to yesterdayâs quarterly update, the broker has downgraded the companyâs shares to a sell rating but with an improved price target of $4.60.
This price target implies potential downside of over 11% from current levels over the next 12 months.
Why is Citi bearish?
Overall, Citi was pleased with Pilbara Mineralsâ performance during the first quarter. It commented:
A solid operational quarter: Ngungaju running at nameplate, overall recovery of ~67%, costs tracking at the lower end of guidance and production annualising ahead. Realised pricing of US$4,813/t (SC6 basis) in line with our expectations.
And while the broker doesnât see any reason why lithium prices should come crashing down to earth any time soon, it feels the market is too bullish on the long term. Citi estimates that the current Pilbara Minerals share price implies a long term spodumene price of US$1,800 per tonne. However, the broker is expecting a price of US$850 per tonne. Citi explained:
Weâve pushed up our spodumene deck, earnings and target priceâitâs hard to see a catalyst for lithium prices to track materially down over the next ~6months. That said, the stock is up by 160% in a year, well ahead of peers; we move to Sell from Neutral on valuation. On our estimates, PLS is implying a long term spodumene price of ~US$1800/t (NPV=share price). The risk to our Sell call here is that the marketâs view on long term spodumene price moves higher i.e., CitiE US$850/t.
The post ‘Too far, too fast’: Pilbara Minerals share price falls on broker downgrade appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.
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More reading
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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.
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