Lygend Indonesian Nickel Output Drives Sharp Profit Growth in 2025

Lygend profits rose in 2025 as Indonesian nickel output and cobalt-bearing MHP revenues increased.
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Lygend Indonesian Nickel Output Drives Sharp Profit Growth in 2025
Lygend Indonesia

Lygend Indonesian nickel output drove a sharp increase in the company’s revenue and profit in 2025. China’s major nickel producer reported revenue of 40.24bn yuan, or about $5.85bn, up 379% from a year earlier.

Net profit attributable to shareholders rose by 61% to 2.85bn yuan. The improvement reflected higher production from Lygend’s Indonesian nickel operations and stronger cobalt prices after export controls in the Democratic Republic of Congo tightened the cobalt market.

Lygend Indonesian nickel output also strengthened the company’s position across both battery and stainless steel raw material chains. Its Indonesian assets produce mixed hydroxide precipitate, nickel sulphate, cobalt sulphate and ferronickel, giving the company flexibility across demand cycles.

HPAL and RKEF Projects Lifted Nickel and Cobalt Volumes

Lygend’s Obi Island HPAL project operated at full capacity in 2025. The six-line facility produced 120,000t in nickel metal equivalent and 14,250t in cobalt metal equivalent during the year.

The HPAL project can produce mixed hydroxide precipitate, nickel sulphate or cobalt sulphate depending on market demand. This flexibility matters because battery materials markets can shift quickly between intermediate products and refined sulphate demand.

The company’s HJF phase I project also ran at nameplate capacity, producing 95,000t in nickel metal equivalent through rotary kiln electric furnace technology. Meanwhile, Lygend ramped up output at its KPS phase II project, which has nameplate capacity of 185,000 t/yr in nickel metal equivalent.

Cobalt Prices Helped Offset Rising Input Costs

Lygend benefited from higher cobalt prices because its MHP contains cobalt. The DRC’s cobalt export controls lifted cobalt market sentiment and increased the value of cobalt-bearing intermediates.

Cobalt prices more than doubled during 2025, rising to about $25/lb in December from around $11.5/lb in January. This gave Lygend additional revenue support from MHP sales.

The stronger cobalt contribution helped offset higher costs for sulphur, energy and other consumables. These inputs remain critical for HPAL operations, where sulphuric acid availability and cost can directly affect processing economics.

Lygend also received approval from Indonesia for sulphuric acid import quotas. This allows partial substitution of sulphur with sulphuric acid when needed, improving feedstock flexibility and supply chain resilience.

The Metalnomist Commentary

Lygend’s 2025 results show how Indonesia has become the operating center of China-linked nickel growth. The company’s advantage now comes from scale, HPAL flexibility and cobalt exposure, but sulphuric acid supply will remain a key cost variable.

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