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The most-traded August zinc contract dropped to 22,780 yuan ($3,507) per tonne as at 10.13am Shanghai time, down 2.3% or 535 yuan per tonne from Thursday’s closing price.
This follows a similar trend in the LME’s three-month zinc price yesterday, when it fell by more than 2% at the close to end the official session on Thursday $78 lower at $2,917 per tonne.
“Zinc is under significant pressure,” Geordie Wilkes, head of research at Sucden Financial told Metal Bulletin. “The backwardation is still in place as shorts look to roll their position, buying the near dated and selling the cash/three-month,” he added.
“[LME] zinc fell for the sixth straight day and broke below $3,000 per oz for the first time in ten months. The weakness has been stoked by recent gains in inventories on the LME,” ANZ Research noted on Friday.
Zinc stocks at LME warehouses stood at 247,450 tonnes on Thursday, up 36.7% since the beginning of the year. Meanwhile zinc inventories totaled 96,957 tonnes as on June 15, up 25.3% from January 5 – the first day that SHFE stocks were assessed this year.
Zinc’s sister-metal lead also softened during the morning session on Thursday, with the uncertainty surrounding heightened trade tensions between China and the United States continuing to dent market sentiment.
Copper prices were similarly lower, with fears that additional tariffs amid the China-US trade spat could affect economic growth.
Meanwhile, nickel maintained its upward momentum this morning following yesterday’s robust performance, with strong fundamentals continuing to support the metal and helping to offset any negative impact from the escalation in global trade tensions.
Base metals prices
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