Shortages, shrinking stocks to energize zinc bulls

Benchmark zinc on the London Metal Exchange at around $2,760 a tonne is up around 15 percent since the start of the year, but stands well below the 10-year high of $3,595.50 seen in February last year.

“It’s a story of shortages and depleted stocks, we’re looking for a price rally to at least $3,000, possibly above $3,500,” said Wood Mackenzie analyst Andrew Thomas.

“If we get a trade agreement between China and the United States, we could go above $3,500.”

The market for zinc, used to galvanize steel, traditionally goes from feast to famine as high prices incentivise higher production, flooding the market with metal, followed by falling prices and output cuts.

But that pattern broke in October 2015 when Glencore shut 500,000 tonnes of capacity, around one-third of its total, to preserve the value of its “reserves in the ground at a time of low zinc” prices.

Prices have since been boosted by mine closures and cutbacks at other mines and environmental issues in top producer China, which shuttered much capacity.

Research firm Antaike says China’s refined zinc output saw its steepest plunge since 2013 last year, partly due to tight raw material supply and longer maintenance periods.

However, supply of feed is rising as can be seen in treatment charges — above $200 a tonne on the spot market from $30 early last year — the price mining companies pay to smelters to have their concentrate turned into metal.

“Even assuming we get robust growth from Chinese smelters, we are still going to see a refined metal deficit in the region of half a million tonnes,” Wood Mackenzie’s Thomas said.

The global zinc market is estimated at around 14 million tonnes this year.

Data from the International Lead and Zinc Study Group (ILZSG) showed a zinc market deficit of 384,000 tonnes last year and shortfalls of 442,000 tonnes and 128,000 tonnes respectively in 2017 and 2016.

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