The trend of recovery was not reversed by the daily move. Investing.com data has the ETF gaining 31.85% on a six-month basis and 117.94% on a year-to-date basis, maintaining a focus on battery metals while it weakens in the short term.
Global X Lithium & Battery Tech ETF had a consistent performance from October 2025 to May 2026. Price trended back down from the mid-$50 range to above $90 before the recent pullback, which took it back to around $84.
The drop represented a clean sweep daily following a strong period. The ETF has shed 6.75% in one week, but it still has registered gains of 2.15% and 15.65% in the past month and 3-month periods, respectively, underscoring that the overall trend is still in play.
As per the chart, the volume also increased near the recent high, which suggests traders became more active as the price reached the upper range. A pullback after that move can reflect profit-taking rather than a full trend reversal.
But there are sessions to come next. If the LIT trades higher than the lower $80, then the buyers can attempt to make good on the momentum. If the price trades below this resistance, then focus will return to the previous breakout area in April.
A basket of lithium stocks is trading around $309.86 on the 30-minute chart, according to TradingView data. As of the time of writing, it is down 0.16% from the day before. The basket grew from the end of April ($280) to mid-May ($331) before declining.
The short-term chart shows a clear loss of momentum after repeated attempts to hold the $325–$330 area. Price then slipped toward $310, with lower highs forming into the latest session.
MACD also weakened. The short-term momentum was still in the sellers’ favor, as can be seen from the blue line remaining below the signal line and the histogram remaining slightly negative.
Despite this, the basket is still above the levels from late April. This indicates that the prevailing trend is still a corrective move within a larger counter-trend recovery movement unless the price continues to fall below the recent support levels.
Gianni Kovacevic made reference to the research in battery chemistry; lithium still is a big story in the future, he said. Solid-state expectations remain high, and more lithium is required for certain advanced battery types, the shared note said.
The same excerpt also noted that sodium-ion batteries could also have some advantages, including lower costs, greater thermal stability, and plentiful raw resources. It said, however, that some energy storage markets were hampered by lower energy density, which resulted in high installation costs for it.
This dichotomy continues to make lithium the heart of the battery debate. Lithium is strongly associated with EVs, aerospace, battery systems for luxury vehicles, and other high-performance applications, among other things, and new battery chemistries may vie for some applications.
The charts are indicating weakness following a solid advance today. However, the bigger picture on lithium is largely about demand for batteries, chemistry changes, and whether the ETF can maintain support following its dramatic May selloff.


