PLS share price: why investors like materials shares

Is the Pilbara Minerals Ltd (ASX:PLS) share price cheap? Here are 3 reasons you might want to consider PLS shares.
The Pilbara Minerals Ltd (ASX:PLS) share price is down 32.6% since the start of 2025. Is it time that you added PLS shares to your watchlist?

PLS share price in focus

Pilbara Minerals is a leading ASX-listed lithium company, known for owning 100% of the world’s largest independent hard-rock lithium operation, Pilgangoora, which it acquired in 2014.

The company’s main business is the extraction and sale of spodumene concentrate (lithium-bearing rocks), which it sells through long-term offtake agreements and spot sales on the Battery Material Exchange (BMX) platform. Notable offtake partners include companies like Great Wall, the Chinese automaker, and POSCO, a South Korean steel producer.

With the growing demand for lithium driven by the rise of electric vehicles and renewable energy technologies, Pilbara Minerals is often seen by bullish investors as a “pure play” on the green tech boom. However, as a commodities producer, the company’s revenue is still subject to significant fluctuations in the global price of spodumene.

The appeal of ASX Materials shares

The S&P/ASX200 Materials Index (ASX: XMJ) has averaged 6.72% per year in capital growth over the last 5 years. That compares to the ASX 200 index which has returned 8.41% per year over the same period. Let’s take a look at why you might want a materials company like PLS in your portfolio.

Big dividends

While there are periods of capital growth, it’s the dividends that most investors are interested in when assessing materials shares. After all, it’s what they’ve been known for for many years. However, PLS is somewhat of an exception to this rule, only delivering an average yield of 2.22% over the last 5 years. I guess investing rules were made to be broken… even if a sector is known for something like big dividends, always assess a company on its own merits.

Growth potential

Mining is one of the backbones of our modern economy and the demand for things like iron ore, copper, and lithium is not going away any time soon.

In fact, the demand for a lot of precious metals is rapidly growing as the economy transitions to renewable energy. A lot of these materials are needed for things like electric car batteries and solar panels. Companies like BHP and Rio Tinto are investing a lot of money to put themselves at the forefront of this oncoming wave of demand.

PLS share price valuation

As a growth company, one way to put a broad estimate on the PLS share price could be to compare its price-to-sales multiple over time. Currently, Pilbara Minerals Ltd shares have a price-sales ratio of 3.81x, compared to its 5-year average of 20.35x, meaning its shares are trading below their historical average. This could mean that the share price has fallen, or sales have increased. In the case of PLS, revenue has been growing over the last 3 years.

Please keep in mind that context is important – and this is just one valuation technique. Investment decisions can’t just be based on one metric.

The Rask websites offer free online investing courses, created by analysts explaining things like Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) and Dividend Discount Models (DDM). They even include free valuation spreadsheets! Both of these models would be a better way to value the PLS share price.

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