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By Boris Mikanikrezai and Orla O’Sullivan
Tin hit an all-time high this year, and was the best performer across the base metals space with a year-to-date gain of nearly 80%. In a context of mixed macrodynamics, the remarkable appreciation of tin prices has primarily been due to extremely bullish supply/demand dynamics.
On the supply side, the Covid-19 pandemic has impacted key tin-producing countries like Indonesia and Malaysia, resulting in lockdowns and output curtailments. It has also disrupted concentrate supply, especially from Myanmar, the world’s largest producer, where Covid-19 restriction measures have undermined the flow of raw material to Chinese smelters. And in China itself, Yunnan province was impacted earlier this year by a heat wave and energy consumption restrictions, undermining smelting activity.
On the demand side, tin has benefited from firm demand from the electronics industry. According to the Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA), global semiconductor industry sales expanded by 23% year on year in the first seven months of the year, with robust demand across all major regional markets.
The supply/demand imbalance has been exacerbated by unprecedented supply chain disruptions, driven by port congestion in addition to shortages of shipping containers and workers. This has, in turn, prevented tin material from moving to areas where the refined market tightness was the most acute, such as the United States and Europe. Consequently, the physical market has become extremely tight, with premiums surging to all-time highs.
The very low level of visible inventories has also amplified the impact on tin prices by triggering noticeable short squeezes, evidenced by an abnormally high backwardation at the front end of the London Metal Exchange tin curve.
Going into 2022, we expect supply/demand dynamics to continue to support tin prices. Even though supply is expected to recover, demand growth is likely to remain strong, especially due to increasing consumption from green energy transition technologies. As a result, we believe that the refined market will remain in deficit, which should therefore warrant a further appreciation of tin prices. With the container market is set to remain tight through next year, we believe that physical premiums will remain historically high. We also expect the tin market to remain prone to short squeezes.
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London metals week remains a key milestone in the commodities calendar. Find out why it’s still a big draw for the world’s commodity trading community, and discover our special LME Week 2021 coverage on key commodities such as nickel, lead, tin and lithium.