Sigma Lithium is on track for hypergrowth, cash flow, and improved balance-sheet health, bolstering the argument that its recent reversal is indicative of a better stock performance ahead.

Analysts and institutional data reflect accumulation and a strengthening support base for the Canada-based mineral exploration and development company.

Short-sellers pose a risk that may cap gains in the near term, but analyst forecasts suggest nearly 47% potential upside over the next 12 months.

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Lithium prices are enjoying a strong run, having gained more than 122% over the past year. But for the stocks of companies mining the soft silvery metal or processing it into battery-grade lithium, their prices haven't yet caught up.

That's precisely the case for Sigma Lithium (NASDAQ: SGML), which is a screaming Buy according to most market vectors, perhaps except for short sellers who have begun to cover their positions.

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The primary hurdle was an operational shutdown that has since been cleared. Brazilian regulators shuttered the Groto De Cirilo mine due to issues with a waste pile, but the issue has since been rectified.

Now, Sigma Lithium is back in business, and the big takeaway from its Q4 2025 results is that the lithium company is not only operational but also profitable and on track for hypergrowth over the next two years.

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Despite its operational challenges, Sigma Lithium reported a solid Q4 on March 30.

Lithium production and processing generated $31 million in operating cash flow, sufficient to enable significant debt reduction and advance the company's strategy.

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Looking ahead, executives expect cash from operations to grow more than 10% in the current quarter, then more than double sequentially in the company's second quarter of the year, approaching $100 million for the period. Longer term, the forecast is for approximately a 200% two-year growth in production as Phase II and Phase III operations commence, and for a steady decline in all-in sustaining cost and improving earnings.

Sigma Lithium’s balance sheet reflects the impacts of its efforts. While cash, assets, and equity are down, the cause is the sale of inventory and the subsequent cash use it enabled. The company paid down significant amounts of debt, reducing trade leverage aggressively and total leverage by approximately 35%. The likely outcome is that cash from operations, as indicated by guidance, will continue to grow and replenish the cash balance, enabling additional deleveraging and long-term equity improvement.

No analyst revisions were tracked within the first few hours of the release, but the initial response is optimistic.

The group is focusing on cash generation, production ramps, and cash flow guidance. Debt reduction is also in the mix, helping solidify support.

As it stands, MarketBeat tracks six analysts who have assigned the stock a consensus Hold rating. The bias is even, with two ratings at Hold, two at Buy, and two at Sell.

The price target also reflects cautious optimism, with the low-end providing a market floor at $13.90 and consensus suggesting a minimum 40% upside as of late March.

Initial market reactions suggest that short-sellers are covering positions, but also that they may be repositioning at a higher level.

While price action popped more than 20% at the high, the gain was capped by the 150-week exponential moving average (EMA), a critical pivot for this market. The 150-week EMA represents long-term, buy-and-hold market sentiment; moving above it signals a shift from distribution to accumulation and is bullish.

The risk is that short-sellers will cap the market at this level. But even if they do, they may not be able to keep it from moving higher due to institutional buying. MarketBeat data reveals institutions own a solid 65% of the stock, providing a solid support base with accumulation expected in 2026.

The data shows them buying on balance for five consecutive quarters, including Q1 2026, with activity ramping up sequentially. The trailing 12-month balance is approximately $2.50 bought for each $1 sold and may increase now that the stock has turned a corner. The business shift helped to derisk the outlook, which is also improving.

Price action following the news is favorable despite the potential for resistance near $13. The 15% price pop reveals support at short-term EMAs, revealing traders' and speculators' interest. The price action also aligns with a bottoming process and may lead to a complete reversal later this year.

Moving above the long-term EMA and the $13 level would confirm an inverse head and shoulders pattern, setting the stage for a sustainable rally.

The article "Sigma Lithium Proves Shorts Wrong: Market Reversal Underway" was originally published by MarketBeat.