Standard Lithium retools operations after short seller's attacks
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By Ernest Scheyder

(Reuters) - Standard Lithium Ltd is trying to become the first new U.S. source of lithium for electric vehicle batteries in decades, a bullish target fueled in part by technical and engineering changes the company is making in response to accusations that its technology does not work.

Vancouver, British Columbia-based Standard is among a wave of companies, including mining major Rio Tinto Ltd, trying to use direct lithium extraction (DLE) technologies https://www.reuters.com/business/sustainable-business/new-lithium-technology-can-help-world-go-green-if-it-works-2022-04-07 to supply the battery metal to the EV industry.

But no DLE technology has worked at commercial scale, and a prominent short seller https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/short-seller-alleges-standard-lithium-technology-does-not-work-2022-02-03 alleged in February that Standard's plan to produce lithium in Arkansas was based on faulty processes. The allegation from Hindenburg Research set in motion a selling spree that wiped out more than $300 million from Standard Lithium's market value. The stock has yet to recover.

Standard pushed back against Hindenburg's claims and defended its lithium extraction technology, but it also made some changes.

In July, it hired two senior engineers to oversee project development. It is now updating its equipment with the help of top shareholder Koch Industries Inc and is hiring an external engineering firm to design a lithium plant and finish a key report for investors.

"We've shifted gears," Chief Executive Robert Mintak told Reuters. "We've been lean on purpose, but we now need to bring in the bandwidth with experience to build projects."

Standard on Wednesday morning said it had hired a Koch subsidiary as its engineering firm.

Four analysts recommend buying Standard's stock and believe it should be trading at nearly twice current levels, according to Refinitiv Eikon data. This suggests Wall Street expects the company's prospects to brighten in the wake of U.S. legislation https://www.reuters.com/markets/commodities/miners-face-supply-chain-overhaul-meet-us-ev-credit-deadline-2022-08-11 that links EV tax credits to domestic lithium production.

Lithium prices have skyrocketed this year due to surging demand from the auto sector. China remains the world's largest lithium processor, though proposed rival projects in the United States and European Union have faced a range of setbacks.

GRAPHIC: Companies working in Lithium https://graphics.reuters.com/MEXICO-LITHIUM/znpnerrrevl/chart.png