(CDEL; Baa2/BBB+/BBB+)
(SQM; Baa1neg/BBB+/NR)
• Chile is one of the largest suppliers to China of lithium carbonate which is used to make electric car batteries so the joint venture between major lithium miner SQM and govt.-owned copper miner Codelco could affect the competitive market for that mineral compound. Codelco and SQM have proposed a joint venture to mine lithium in the Salar de Atacama region of Chile which has one of the largest lithium deposits in the world.
• We don’t see a material change in the credit profile of SQM or CDEL from this issue. CDEL 35s were last quoted T+126bp, 32bp tighter since June 30th and 39bp tighter since new issue pricing January 2025. SQM 34s were last quoted T+118bp, 40bp tighter since June 30th and 44bp tighter YTD.
• Codelco Chairman Max Pacheco was quoted by Diario Financiero as saying he expected China antitrust agency approval soon. We posted back in March that he was targeting September so there has been a delay.
• We don’t expect a problem gaining the approval. Lithium prices fell substantially earlier this year which has impaired SQM’s earnings despite rising production so there has already been oversupply in the market, though prices did rebound after China cut back on some of its domestic production. Australia is also a primary supplier of Lithium carbonate to China.
• Please see our post from earlier this year regarding the Codelco-SQM JV for lithium mining:
https://mni.marketnews.com/4gVavRa
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US PPI inflation is released on Wednesday before CPI inflation on Thursday, an unusual ordering that should see core PCE implications dialled in after the CPI release rather than the usual wide range waiting for specific PPI details. PPI will be watched more closely than usual this month after a far stronger than expected jump in last month’s July report fired a warning short over tariff-based cost pressures starting to feed through. That included a 0.6% M/M increase in our preferred core series of PPI ex food, energy & trade services, which strips out items such as the then booming portfolio management & investment advice category following the strength in equity markets. It's too early to gauge an accurate sense of analyst expectations for August.
CPI inflation on Thursday will then be the last major release ahead of the Sep 17 FOMC decision. Consensus looks for core CPI at 0.3% M/M after the 0.32% M/M in July, another monthly increase comfortably above a pace consistent with 2% inflation. August should in theory start to see the largest tariff impacts along with September and possibly October. Returning to July’s report, core goods inflation was softer than expected, at a still solid (by core goods standards) 0.2% M/M for a second month running but about half that of 0.4% expected by analysts. Instead, non-housing core services surprised higher. The latter was a “dangerous” development in the words of a usually dovish Chicago Fed’s Goolsbee (’25 voter), who speaking after Friday’s payrolls report is still undecided on a September cut whilst looking for August inflation data “to get more information”.

Barclays analysts now expect three Fed cuts in the remainder of the year, adding October to their pre-existing call for 25bp reductions in September and December. "Given the disappointing August employment report, we expect the FOMC to see more elevated downside risks to the employment side of the mandate."