Why Standard Lithium Stock Lit Up Today
Key Takeaways
Don't buy a stock just because someone on Wall Street tells you to.
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2 min read
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investment
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July 11, 2025
11:27 AM
The Motley Fool
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Don't buy a stock just because someone on Wall Street tells you to
Lithium mining hopeful Standard Lithium (SLI 5. 50%) -- it's too early to call it a "lithium miner," as it has yet to actually start extracting the mineral -- was trading 6% higher as of 11:25 a
ET Friday as investors rushed to buy the stock
And why did they do that
Because Raymond James told them to
Image source: Getty Images
What Raymond James says Standard Lithium After the close of trading Thursday, investment bank Raymond James initiated coverage of Standard Lithium with an outperform rating, as TheFly
Com reports, and with a curious 12-month price target of $2. "SLI is a leader in Direct Lithium Extraction
Focused on advancing its portfolio of lithium-brine jects in the United States," wrote Raymond James analyst Daniel Magder. "While still in the development stage, we believe SLI offers investors good exposure to lithium. " So this is a long-term play on lithium demand growing over time, and on Standard Lithium becoming a company that can help meet that demand
Is Standard Lithium stock a buy
But here's the thing: Despite telling investors Standard Lithium will outperform the stock market, Raymond James valued the stock at only $2
Standard Lithium stock was already trading at $2. 71 per when the analyst published his view, and it costs $2. 88 per after Friday morning's run-up
What confuses me is why Raymond James would recommend buying a stock when it had -- at the time of that recommendation -- less than 2% potential upside over the next 12 months based on the analyst's own calculations
It just doesn't make sense to me, especially knowing that Standard Lithium is unfitable, and that there are fitable lithium companies Albemarle, SQM, and Rio Tinto for investors to choose from
My advice is to avoid Standard Lithium and buy one of its fitable rivals instead
Rich Smith has no position in any of the stocks mentioned
The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned
The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
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