Business Standard

Metals head for record; zinc prices spike to 14-year high

- BLOOMBERG

Base metals surged, led by zinc, which spiked to the highest since 2007, after European smelters became the latest casualties in a global energy crisis that’s knocking supply offline and heaping pressure on manufactur­ers.

Zinc rose as much as 6.9 per cent on the London Metal Exchange, and a gauge of six industrial metals rapidly closed in on an all-time high. Aluminium, one of the most energy-intensive commoditie­s, is at the highest since 2008. Copper bounced closer to the $10,000-a-tonne mark, and spreads are pointing to a sharply tighter market — spot copper contracts are trading at the biggest premium over futures in nearly a decade as global inventorie­s shrink.

Metal supply cuts are spreading from China to Europe, as energy shortages drive up costs for electricit­y and natural gas, threatenin­g more inflationa­ry pressure from rising commodity prices. The latest big catalyst came on Wednesday when Nyrstar – one of the biggest zinc producers – said it will cut output at three European smelters by up to 50 per cent due to rising power prices and costs associated with carbon emissions.

So far, the energy crisis has had an outsized impact on supply, but concerns about demand are also rising fast as manufactur­ers face a simultaneo­us surge in raw material prices across the board. The CRB BLS US raw industrial­s spot index surged to an all-time high on Wednesday, reflecting surging prices for raw materials like hides, tallow and metals scraps that don’t trade on futures exchanges.

Strains in China are particular­ly evident, where factory-gate prices rose at the fastest pace in almost 26 years in September. It’s a surge that could easily spill over to other economies given the nation’s role as the world’s largest exporter.

“It is zinc’s turn” to surge as the energy crisis creates large-scale shutdowns or production cuts at smelters, said Jia Zheng, a trader with Shanghai Dongwu Jiuying Investment Management. Power curbs are also expanding to China’s main zinc producing provinces, she said. Some Chinese smelters had already reduced runs as they grapple with an electricit­y shortage fueled by record coal prices.

Zinc rose as much as 6.9 per cent to $3,637.50 a tonne, the highest since July 2007, on the London Metal Exchange, before trading at $3,539.50 as of 08:54 a.m. local time. In Shanghai, prices surged 7.1 per cent, their daily limit, to 25,700 yuan a tonne.

Prices may stay elevated as the energy crisis continues to impact the metals market, researcher Shanghai Metals Market said in a note on Thursday. A surplus in the global zinc market was already expected to narrow next year before the latest cuts, according to the Internatio­nal Lead and Zinc Study Group.

“If production were to be reduced for any prolonged period, this would presumably have a massive impact on the zinc market, which would then no doubt be seriously undersuppl­ied,” Daniel Briesemman, an analyst at Commerzban­k, said in an emailed note. “The price response certainly makes sense against this backdrop.”

Copper also spiked, with prices rising as much as 5 per cent in Shanghai amid signs of acute tightness in supply. The cash-to-threemonth spread in London was trading at the biggest backwardat­ion since 2012, as global exchange inventorie­s plummet. Five out of the six base-metal contracts are on the LME are in backwardat­ion, signaling broad pressure on spot supply.

In ferrous markets, iron ore futures rebounded after sliding for the past two days. The contract in China is still heading for a weekly loss of about 2 per cent as new steel output curbs for early next year are set to hurt consumptio­n.

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