Business World

Zinc drops to new low on weakness in steel and iron ore, China demand worry

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LONDON — Nickel bounced off its weakest level in nearly a year on Friday while zinc hit a twoweek low, pressured by weaker iron ore and oil prices as well as concern about demand in top consumer China.

Zinc prices were also knocked by a jump in available inventorie­s, showing that supplies were adequate despite the closure of major mines last year.

Both zinc and nickel are used in the steel industry so are sensitive to iron ore and steel prices while oil is a key input in mining.

“The steel-related metals such as nickel and zinc are among the worst performers, feeling the pinch from iron ore. Oil is not helping. It’s crashing after the disappoint­ment from the OPEC (Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries) meeting,” Gianclaudi­o Torlizzi, Partner at consultanc­y TCommodity in Milan, said.

Spot iron ore has tumbled about 40% from this year’s peak, although it had a brief respite on Friday, and Shanghai rebar futures fell for a seventh session in a row.

“My view is that at this point the downside in all the base metals is not huge. We’ll probably see the last leg down and I would take that as an opportunit­y to go long,” Mr. Torlizzi said.

Benchmark zinc on the London Metal Exchange ( LME) closed down 1.60% at $ 2,529 a ton after touching $2,512, the weakest since May 18.

On- warrant LME inventorie­s — those not earmarked for delivery and therefore available to investors — climbed 11% on Friday to 179,325 tons.

LME nickel failed to trade in closing open outcry activity and was bid up 0.80% at $8,910 a ton, recovering from a low of $8,700, the weakest since June 8, 2016.

Analyst Bernard Dahdah at Natixis said nickel’s losses were an overreacti­on and prices would recover when there was more certainty over the extent of nickel ore shipments from Indonesia. “We do not expect it (shipments) to return to levels seen prior to the 2013 ban,” a note said.

Three- month LME copper finished 0.60% weaker at $ 5,665. “The market is stalling into a down trend channel from February’s $6,204 high,” Alastair Munro at Marex Spectron said in a note. A break below $5,602 would open up the potential for a move to $5,500, he said. Chinese base metals demand is expected to taper off in the second half of the year, Richard Knights of Liberum said. “With growth in credit rolling off since November 2016, metal demand should follow from mid-year, just as supply growth in iron ore and coal markets is accelerati­ng,” he said in a note.

Aluminum closed up 0.20% at $1,931, lead ended down 0.10% at $2,108 while tin dropped 0.70% to $20,300. — Reuters

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