Business World

Zinc stronger on supply shortage, weak dollar

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LONDON — Zinc rose to its highest level in three weeks on Monday as the dollar fell and on expectatio­ns of a continued shortage in supply for the metal used to galvanize steel.

Zinc, the best performing London Metal Exchange (LME) metal, rose 60% in 2016 fueled by fears of shortages after some major mines were closed or suspended.

This also means the annual commodity index rebalancin­g this week could pressure LME zinc.

The metal on the LME ended 1.80% higher to $ 2,667 per ounce, a level last seen on Dec. 19.

“Its been a good run for zinc but at the same time we are also seeing some zinc mines restart, so its question of sentiment from the indices,” ING’s Head of Commoditie­s Strategy Hamza Khan said, referring to the possibilit­y of Glencore restarting its mines.

Supporting base metals was also a weaker dollar, which fell 0.30%, after a US Federal Reserve official called for faster interest rate increases.

Barclays said in a note it expected tightness in the zinc market to “remain supportive as concentrat­e shortages could lead to smelter outages outside China.”

J. P. Morgan expects the zinc bull rally to extend into the first half of this year and said any declines in prices would be short term as it would be outpaced by its “strong fundamenta­ls story.”

The bank also said it has lowered its expectatio­ns of an announceme­nt of mine restarts from Glencore.

Glencore’s chief executive officer said in December that zinc capacity would stay shut until market conditions meant the extra supply would not push the market lower.

Among other metals, copper closed flat at $5,591 per ton. Last Thursday, copper prices hit their highest in more than two weeks at $5,698 a ton.

Disruption­s could come as soon as this week with a ban on ore exports from Indonesia set to come into effect, although miner Freeport is in talks with the government to continue exports as it constructs a new smelter.

Aluminium rose 0.80% at $ 1,727 a ton, not far off a twomonth low hit last week.

Lead closed 2.60% at $ 2,108 per ton, and nickel rose 1.40% to $10,390 a ton while tin added 0.50% at $21,120. —

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