Houston Chronicle

Chinese metal giant upending nickel market all over again

- By Bloomberg News

Fourteen years ago, China’s Tsingshan Holding Group Co. upended the nickel market with a cheaper way to extract the metal used to make steel stainless. They appear to be doing it once again, this time with a focus on batteries.

The company’s new way to make nickel for batteries potentiall­y breaks down one of the biggest bottleneck­s to meet surging demand, undercutti­ng a key pillar that’s supported the market. The prospect of additional supply saw the metal cap its biggest twoday loss in a decade, and while prices edged higher Friday, they’re still near a three-month low.

Tsingshan’s move harks back to the early 2000s, when a China fueled commoditie­s boom saw prices of the metal used in everything from kitchen utensils to aircraft surge above $50,000 a metric ton in 2007.

The rally, and a supply chain largely controlled by the West, prompted Tsingshan to seek a cheaper alternativ­e. It came up with a way to use nickel pig iron from massive deposits in Indonesia, unleashing a low-grade substitute that helped send prices back below $10,000 just two years later.

Now the world’s top stainlesss­teel maker and a sizable nickel producer is roiling the market again. With prices rallying alongside talk of another supercycle, and a bullish outlook for battery demand amid a global energy transforma­tion, the group said it will start providing nickel matte to battery-material producers and plans to expand nickel investment­s in Indonesia.

“2007 and 2021 are two milestones for the nickel industry,” said Wenyu Yao, senior commoditie­s strategist at ING Bank.

Nickel rose 1.8 percent to settle at $16,425 a ton at 6:07 p.m. on the London Metal Exchange, after tumbling 14 percent in the previous two days. The most-active contract in Shanghai capped its worst day since trading began in 2015. Most other LME metals edged higher on Friday.

Tsingshan plans to process nickel pig iron — until now only used for stainless steel — into an intermedia­te product known as matte that can be further refined into battery nickel. That may open up a big new supply route from Indonesia’s low-grade laterite ore mines to electric vehicles and likely reduces the chances of a structural deficit for the material that Elon Musk has said is the biggest concern for Tesla Inc. batteries.

Currently, exchange-traded nickel is only for so-called Class 1 nickel, which must have a minimum purity of 99.8 percent. That type of nickel only accounts for less than 25 percent of the the total finished nickel supply, according to ING.

“If the new methods that Tsingshan developed can be widely applied to produce matte and further convert to sulphate, we could see a convergenc­e of Class 1 and Class 2 pricing,” ING’s Yao said Thursday in a note to clients.

Nickel is critical to the world’s clean-energy transition. It packs more energy into batteries and allows producers to reduce use of cobalt, which is more expensive and has a supply chain that’s considered less transparen­t.

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