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Li-Cycle Cuts 17% of Staff as Costs Mount
On Tuesday, March 26, the company announced that it would proceed with a staff cut of 17% - or 60 employees. Li-Cycle has struggled with construction cost overruns at its Rochester, New York battery processing facility. In 2023, the U.S. Energy Department provided the company a conditional $375 million loan for the facility. However, costs have nearly doubled for the construction project to $960 million. That cost overrun, in addition to other technical complexities, has hit the stock hard and forced the company to seek cash from Glencore, a Swiss commodity trading and mining company.
Despite its struggles, investors still have reason to be optimistic. The global lithium-ion battery recycling market was valued at US$3.79 billion in a report from Fortune Business Insights in 2023. That same report projected that the market would grow to US$23.2 billion by 2032. That would represent a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 22% over the forecast period.
Shares of Li-Cycle are trading in favourable value territory compared to its peers at the time of this writing. In March 2024, the company reported full-year 2023 revenue of $18.3 million – up 11% compared to 2022.