Specialty metals — cobalt, nickel, tungsten, and tin — are four distinct commodity markets with concentrated supply chains dominated by one or two countries, supplying inputs that advanced manufacturing cannot substitute away from. Global production in 2024: cobalt ~300 kt est., nickel ~3.5 Mt, tungsten ~81 kt, tin ~371 kt (refined). Combined mine-stage revenue roughly $70–80B/year. est. Each metal has a different supply-demand balance: nickel is in structural surplus (Indonesian capacity flood), cobalt swung from glut to deficit in 2025 after DRC export controls, tin is in narrow deficit (~2,200 t in 2024), and tungsten is tight due to Chinese export restrictions. No pure-play US-listed specialty metal miner exists; exposure comes through diversified miners Vale (nickel/cobalt), Glencore (cobalt/nickel), and BHP (nickel suspended).
Tin is the most direct AI link — every AI server's circuit board uses tin solder. Cobalt and nickel feed UPS battery banks and grid-scale storage co-located with data centers. Tungsten goes into cutting tools for precision-machining server components. Each metal's economics are distinct — nickel is drowning in Indonesian supply while cobalt had its tightest market ever in 2025. US-listed exposure only comes through diversified miners where specialty metals are a secondary business line.
Cobalt Institute, "Cobalt Market Report 2024"; International Tin Association, "Global tin production falls in 2024"; USGS Mineral Commodity Summaries 2025 (tungsten); Stainless Steel World, "The world nickel market in 2025 and 2026."
| Metal | 2024 demand | Key end-uses (share) | YoY growth |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cobalt | 222,000 t | Batteries 76% (EV 43%, portable electronics ~20%), superalloys, catalysts | +10–12% est. |
| Nickel | 3,346,000 t | Stainless steel ~69%, batteries ~10–12%, alloys/plating ~19% | +4.8% |
| Tungsten | ~80,000 t est. | Cutting tools, military, mining/drilling, electronics | ~+1.3% est. |
| Tin | ~368,000 t | Solder 51%, chemicals, tinplate, lead-acid batteries | +3.0% |
Cobalt Institute via mining.com (May 2025); Stainless Steel World (Nov 2024); USGS MCS 2025; ITA "Tin use in recovery cycle" (Oct 2024).
| Metal | 2025 demand | 2026 demand | Key driver |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cobalt | ~238,000 t est. | 292,300 t | EV battery growth, grid storage for data centers, aerospace backlogs |
| Nickel | 3,514,000 t | 3,820,000 t est. | Stainless steel (China/India), EV batteries (slower than expected due to LFP shift) |
| Tungsten | ~81,000 t est. | ~82,000 t est. | Defense spending, industrial tooling, ~1.3% CAGR through 2029 |
| Tin | ~380,000 t est. | ~390,000 t est. | AI server PCBs, EV electronics, solar PV cells |
AI-specific demand: Tin is the most direct link — every AI server's circuit board uses tin solder. Cobalt and nickel feed UPS battery banks and grid-scale storage co-located with data centers. Tungsten goes into cutting tools for precision-machining server components. None of these AI demand channels is large enough to move the overall balance by more than a few percent. est.
Fastmarkets (Jan 2026) for cobalt 2026; Stainless Steel World for nickel; Core Consultants Group (May 2025) for tungsten CAGR; ITA for tin; BMI/Fitch Solutions for tin $35,000/t forecast.
| Metal | 2024 production | Dominant producer | Concentration risk |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cobalt | ~300,000 t est. | DRC: ~244 kt (80%+) | DRC imposed export ban (Feb 2025) then quota system (Oct 2025); 87,000 t/yr cap + 9,600 t/yr strategic stockpile |
| Nickel | ~3,530,000 t | Indonesia: ~66% of mine output | Indonesia HPAL/NPI capacity still expanding; 5.49 Mt total global capacity (64% utilization) |
| Tungsten | 81,000 t | China: 67,000 t (82%) | China imposed dual-use export restrictions (Dec 2024); declining ore grades in Chinese mines |
| Tin | 371,200 t (refined) | China: 194,000 t (52%); Indonesia: largest exporter but -31% in 2024 | Myanmar mining suspension (Wa State); Indonesian licensing delays |
Fastmarkets (Jan 2026); mining-technology.com (Aug 2024); USGS MCS 2025; ITA (Feb 2025); Core Consultants Group (May 2025); Stainless Steel World (Nov 2024, Apr 2025).
| Metal | 2024 balance | 2025 balance | 2026 balance | Price direction |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cobalt | Surplus (oversupplied pre-DRC ban) | Tight (DRC quota + doubled prices) | -10,700 t deficit | Cobalt metal more than doubled in 2025 ($24k → $56k/t by Apr 2026) |
| Nickel | Surplus | +209,000 t surplus | +261,000 t surplus | LME at ~$15,000–19,000/t est., five consecutive years of surplus |
| Tungsten | Tight | Tighter (China restrictions) | Tight est. | APT from $312/MTU (2023) → $415/MTU (early 2025), forecast past $460 est. |
| Tin | -2,200 t deficit | Deficit tightening est. | Deficit est. | LME 3-month at $36,787/t (Nov 2025); BMI forecasts $35,000/t avg for 2026 |
Three of four metals (cobalt, tungsten, tin) are in deficit or tight, with prices rising. Nickel is the outlier — Indonesia's massive capacity expansion created a structural surplus that took prices from $48,000/t (Mar 2022 peak) to ~$15,000–19,000/t. est.
Fastmarkets (Jan 2026) for cobalt deficit; Stainless Steel World for nickel surplus; Core Consultants for tungsten; mining.com for tin deficit; ycharts.com for cobalt price series; carboncredits.com for nickel price.
| Metric | VALE | BHP | GLENF (Glencore) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Market cap | $69B | $236B | $95B |
| Stock price (Jun 3, 2026) | $16.06 | $90.85 (ADR) | $8.07 (OTC) |
| Revenue (TTM / FY2024) | $41.2B | $54.0B | $230.9B |
| Net income | $2.4B (FY2025) | $10.2B | -$1.6B (FY2024) |
| Trailing P/E | 23.1 | 23.0 | 273 (neg. earnings) |
| Forward P/E | 7.9 | — | 13.9 |
| Dividend yield | 5.6% | 2.9% | 2.1% |
| P/B | 1.84 | — | 2.85 |
| Nickel production (2025) | 177,000 t | ~0 (suspended Oct 2024) | 71,900 t |
| Cobalt production (2025) | Byproduct (not disclosed separately) | — | 36,100 t |
| Primary commodity | Iron ore (~75% of EBITDA) est. | Iron ore + copper | Copper, coal, zinc + trading |
| Specialty metals as % of revenue | ~20% (VBM segment: $8.2B) | ~0% (nickel suspended) | ~5% est. |
Vale is 75%+ iron ore by EBITDA est.; its nickel is the largest among these three (177 kt) but it took a $4.6B impairment on Canadian nickel assets in 2025 and is reviewing its Thompson, Manitoba operations. BHP suspended its entire Nickel West operation in October 2024 due to Indonesian oversupply, spending ~$300M/year in care-and-maintenance with a review by February 2027. Glencore is the world's largest cobalt producer (36.1 kt in 2025) but cobalt is a small fraction of its $231B revenue, and it put its Koniambo nickel operation on care-and-maintenance.
stockanalysis.com for VALE statistics; BHP annual report 2024; Glencore preliminary results 2024; companiesmarketcap.com for Glencore; Vale 6-K filing (2025 results); BHP/Glencore production reports.
Vale at $16.06 / $69B market cap. The energy transition metals segment (nickel + copper + cobalt + PGMs) generated $8.2B revenue and $3.4B EBITDA in FY2025 — about 22% of the company's $15.5B total adjusted EBITDA. At $69B market cap, $69B × 22% = ~$15B implied value for the specialty metals exposure, or ~4.4× segment EBITDA. est. Nickel all-in cost is $12,158/t against LME ~$15,000–19,000/t est.. Forward P/E of 7.9 reflects analyst expectations that iron ore holds up. Annual dividends of $4.3B (5.6% yield) are funded primarily by iron ore cash flows.
BHP at $90.85 / $236B market cap. Nickel operations are fully suspended. BHP is spending ~$300M/year to keep Nickel West in care-and-maintenance. At today's price, an owner gets zero current nickel production and a call option on restart if nickel prices recover above ~$20,000–25,000/t. est. BHP's value is copper (growing via the OZ Minerals acquisition) and iron ore. Specialty metals exposure: effectively zero until the February 2027 review.
Glencore at $8.07 / $95B market cap. Produced 36.1 kt of cobalt (world's largest) and 71.9 kt of nickel in 2025. At cobalt ~$56,000/t, that cobalt production is worth ~$2B in revenue; nickel at ~$15,000/t adds ~$1.1B. Combined ~$3.1B of specialty metals revenue against $231B total — about 1.3%. est. Glencore's marketing/trading arm ($2.3–3.5B EBIT guidance) earns from physical commodity trading spreads, providing indirect specialty metals leverage through volatility. The FY2024 net loss ($1.6B) reflected coal price declines and impairments. Forward P/E of 13.9 implies analyst consensus expects recovery. est.
Dilution check: Vale has been relatively stable at ~4.26B shares. BHP and Glencore have both conducted buybacks — Glencore authorized $1B in buybacks for 2025. No significant dilution risk at any of the three.
| Claim | Source | Confidence |
|---|---|---|
| Cobalt 2026 demand 292,300 t / deficit 10,700 t | Fastmarkets, Jan 6 2026 | Published forecast |
| DRC cobalt quota 87,000 t/yr | Fastmarkets, Jan 6 2026 | Reported |
| Cobalt 2024 demand 222,000 t | Cobalt Institute via mining.com, May 2025 | Industry body |
| Cobalt price $55,857/t (Apr 2026) | ycharts.com (IMF source) | Market data |
| Nickel 2025 surplus +209 kt, 2026 +261 kt | Stainless Steel World, Apr 2025 | Published forecast |
| Nickel price ~$18,812/t (Jun 2026) | carboncredits.com, Jun 3 2026 | Market data |
| Nickel 5.49 Mt global capacity | Stainless Steel World, Apr 2025 | Industry estimate |
| Tungsten 81,000 t global production, China 82% | USGS MCS 2025 via miningvisuals.com | Government data |
| Tungsten APT ~$415/MTU (early 2025) | Core Consultants Group, May 2025 | Analyst estimate |
| Tin 371,200 t refined production, -2,200 t deficit (2024) | International Tin Association, Feb 2025 | Industry body |
| Tin $35,000/t 2026 forecast | BMI/Fitch Solutions via mining.com, Nov 2025 | Analyst forecast |
| Vale: 177 kt nickel, $41.2B revenue, $2.4B net income | Vale 6-K filing / production report (FY2025) | Company filing |
| BHP: nickel suspended Oct 2024, $300M/yr maintenance | BHP media release, Jul 2024 | Company disclosure |
| Glencore: 36.1 kt cobalt, 71.9 kt nickel, $230.9B revenue | Glencore production report (FY2025) + preliminary results (FY2024) | Company filing |
| Combined specialty metals revenue ~$70–80B | Derived from production × price across metals | est. |
| Implied specialty metals % of each company | Derived from segment data and metal prices | est. |
| Indonesian nickel cost ~$10,000–12,000/t | General knowledge | est. |
| LFP ~40% of EV battery market (2024) | General knowledge | est. |
| Myanmar ~700,000 t tin reserves | General knowledge | est. |
| Vale iron ore ~75% of EBITDA | Derived from segment disclosure | est. |
| BHP restart threshold ~$20,000–25,000/t | General knowledge | est. |