10 Best EV Materials Stocks to Buy

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In this article, we discuss the 10 best EV materials stocks to buy. If you want to skip our detailed analysis of these stocks, go directly to the 5 Best EV Materials Stocks to Buy.

The increase in demand for electric vehicles (EVs) around the world over the past few years has also given a boost to companies that sell products critical to the manufacture of these vehicles. In the mining sector, copper and lithium producing firms deal extensively with the EV industry. In the automotive field, firms that sell transmission and electrical systems have contracts with EV makers. Semiconductor manufacturers have also benefited from the rise in EV sales. According to the International Energy Agency, there were more than 10 million EVs on the roads in 2020.

In June, news publication Forbes reported that a group of EV materials stocks picked by a team of experts at the publication had registered year-to-date gains of 17%, comparing favorably to the 15% year-to-date rise in the industry benchmark S&P 500 over the same time period. Some of the prominent names in the electric vehicle industry presently include Tesla, Inc. (NASDAQ: TSLA), Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Limited (NYSE: TSM), NIO Inc. (NYSE: NIO), and Freeport-McMoRan Inc. (NYSE: FCX), among others.

Despite the COVID-19 pandemic, electric vehicle makers had a better-than-expected fiscal year, with Tesla, Inc. (NASDAQ: TSLA) registering a record rally through the lockdown that shattered market records. In 2021, after a slow start to the year, EV sales are back on the growth trajectory, with EV makers like Tesla, Inc. (NASDAQ: TSLA) and NIO Inc. (NYSE: NIO) reporting record deliveries. Investment bank Citigroup claims EV makers delivered 227,000 new energy vehicles in China, a big EV market, in June this year, up 15% month-on-month and 166% year-on-year.

A report on the outlook for the electric vehicle industry by the IEA reveals that in the first quarter of this year, EV sales rose by 140% year-on-year. Most of this growth was attributed to the sales of EVs in China and Europe, accounting for 500,000 and 450,000 total deliveries respectively. If the sales of EVs continue to grow, the agency further notes, EVs could represent 7% of the road vehicle fleet by 2030, compared to the 12% goal (230 million EV vehicles on the road) that a Sustainable Development initiative has envisioned. Nickel and cobalt, two key metals required for the production of EV batteries, as well as copper, used in a variety of EV components, have gradually seen demand rise as the sale and production of EVs accelerates. A report by Glencore, a mining firm, has forecast that the demand for these three metals will jump to 1.1 megaton, 314 kiloton, and 4.1 megaton by 2030. The company predicts that if 10 million EVs are sold every year by 2025, nickel demand will increase by 400 kilotons annually.