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Sibanye anticipates short-term volatility in the platinum price, but a return to previous lows is unlikely

Richard Stewart, CEO of Sibanye Stillwater mining group, stated on Monday that platinum group metal prices would remain volatile for the foreseeable future, but they are unlikely to return to the "unsustainable lows" seen last year.

The price of palladium and platinum, both used in autocatalysts that reduce exhaust emissions from cars, has risen since the second half 2025. This is due to a shortage of supply which helped to offset the long-term effects of the growth of electric vehicles.

Spot platinum has fallen 1.6% in 2026, after soaring 127% from?2025 to a record $2.918.80 an ounce in January.

Stewart told?on the fringes of the Africa Mining Indaba that he believes a higher price floor for the industry has been established.

Stewart stated, "I believe the prices will continue to fluctuate." "But I do not think that they will return to the low base we had last year. It was unsustainable. "It was not sustainable."

Sibanye was also evaluating when to restart its Stillwater West Mine in the United States. This mine had been placed on care-and-maintenance in 2024. He said that the decision would be based on a longer-term perspective of the palladium markets, rather than on short-term price movements.

Stewart said, "I'm not sure we will make a decision until we see how the world develops over the next 12-24 months."

Stewart stated that preliminary findings are expected to be released this month or in early March on the petition of?Sibanye to the U.S. for a tariff to be imposed on Russian imports of palladium to ensure the viability and long-term viability U.S. supply.

FINLAND'S LITHIUM MANUFACTURE TO BEGIN IN THE FOURTH QUARTER

The diversified miner will be completing the?commissioning phase of its Keliber Lithium project in Finland in this year. Production of technical-grade liquid lithium is expected to begin in the fourth quarter.

Stewart stated that the final step in production of battery-grade Lithium?at Keliber would be dependent on metal prices and offtake arrangements.

He said that long-term agreements for offtake would be as important as the price to protect miners from potential oversupply, especially from China.

Stewart explained: "If we are producing a product of battery grade, we ultimately want to supply it into European supply chains, and have partners and offtakes which make commercial sense."

He added, "So these are the things we're looking at right now." (Reporting and editing by Nqobile Dudla, Olivia Kumwenda Mtambo)

(source: Reuters)