Business World

Most base metals rebound on bargain hunt; tin sinks

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LONDON — Zinc and other industrial metals recovered on Wednesday on bargain hunting and consumer buying, but sentiment was still fragile due to persistent fears about the prospect of trade conflicts hitting economic growth.

Tin tumbled to the lowest in nearly six months on concerns about growing supply.

Underlying supply/demand fundamenta­ls were largely healthy in most industrial metals, but prices had been undermined by tit- for- tat trade skirmishes, analysts said. “These losses are purely from financial market fears and it’s hard to say when that will bottom. From a fundamenta­l perspectiv­e, I don’t have any worries at the current time,” said Colin Hamilton, director of commoditie­s research at BMO.

Traders said some of the buying was coming from speculator­s and consumers who regarded the current levels as cheap after steep losses recently.

“There will be a lot of focus on the China PMIs coming at the weekend to see how resilient China has remained in the face of the growing trade concerns,” Mr. Hamilton added, referring to purchasing managers’ index reports largely followed by investors to gauge the health of the economy.

Three- month zinc on the London Metal Exchange (LME) ended up 1.3% to $ 2,876 a ton, rebounding from $ 2,815 on Tuesday, the lowest in over 10 months.

The premium of cash zinc over three months zinc above $ 49 a ton held near Friday’s $59.50, the highest since October last year.

“The fundamenta­l picture is not looking as bullish, with mine ramp ups set to at least push the concentrat­e market back into surplus,” Oliver Nugent, commoditie­s strategist at ING Bank, said in a note.

LME aluminum gained 0.80% to $ 2,176 a ton, after hitting an 11-week low of $2,135 on Tuesday.

“Consumer buying evident into yesterday’s lows,” Alastair Munro at broker Marex Spectron said in a note.

LME copper ended down 0.30% at $6,692.5 a ton, paring losses after earlier in the session dropping to $6,667 a ton, its lowest since April 4.

LME nickel climbed 0.60% to $14,880 a ton, bouncing from an earlier low of $ 14,505 when Philippine miners sought to lift a ban on new large-scale mining projects after the state removed restrictio­ns on fresh smaller ventures.

Tin was down 1.2% at $19,855 a ton after touching $19,720, the weakest since Dec. 28.

LME lead gained 1% to $2,435.

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