Business World

Zinc pulls back from rally as investors lock in profits

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LONDON — Zinc prices slipped on Wednesday as investors locked in profits after a sharp rally in recent weeks that was based more on speculativ­e buying than on underlying physical demand.

Losses were pared, however, and other metals moved into positive territory late in the session, supported by a weaker dollar after the vice-chair of the US Federal Reserve announced his resignatio­n.

Commoditie­s priced in dollars get a boost when the exchange rate weakens, making them cheaper for buyers using other currencies.

The London Metal Exchange ( LME) index of six industrial metals had surged 21% from early June until Monday, but many analysts had warned that prices were moving above levels justified by supply/demand fundamenta­ls.

The expiry of LME options on Wednesday was also influencin­g the market, traders said.

“We’re probably seeing some profit taking today. Given all these analysts, including myself, saying they’ve gone too far, some investors may be getting a bit nervous,” Caroline Bain, chief commoditie­s economist at Capital Economics, said in the morning when most metals prices were in the red.

It was surprising that there was not more risk-off sentiment in markets due to tensions over North Korea, Bain said, but she added that there also may be some underlying support for metals from the aftermath of hurricane Harvey.

LME benchmark zinc closed down 1.40% at $3,095 a ton after giving up 2% on Tuesday. Zinc hit the highest level in a decade of $3,231.75 on Aug. 23.

Also pressuring zinc and nickel, mostly used in the steel sector, was a fall in Chinese rebar steel futures as physical trading cooled.

Nickel finished 0.70% firmer at $12,165 a ton, rebounding after touching an intraday low of $ 11,910. Protesters stormed an annual mining industry summit in the Philippine­s, demanding that mineral extraction be halted in the world’s top supplier of nickel ore.

Three- month copper closed unchanged at $6,901 a ton after climbing to a three-year peak of $6,970 on Tuesday.

LME lead added 0.50% to end at $2,341 a ton. On-warrant LME inventorie­s of lead, those not earmarked for delivery, rose by 16% on Wednesday to 103,175 tons.

Aluminum closed up 0.40% at $2,104.50 a ton while tin rose 0.30% to $20,790 a ton. —

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