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Falling more than 3% over the morning, zinc prices are trading at their lowest point since June 2017 as the metal continues to struggle against a tight fundamental backdrop.
Zinc’s nearby cash/three-month and July/August spreads are both backwardated at $11 per tonne and $17 per tonne respectively, with the metal’s rising stock levels equally supportive of lower prices.
“A short-covering rally emerged last Friday (July 6) and the timing of the technical rebound goes hand-in-hand with LME zinc’s improved micro dynamics. A previous dominant warrant holder with 40-49% of the available warrants has increased their holdings to 50-79%,” Metal Bulletin analyst Andy Farida said.
“With metal in such tight hands, the LME zinc price could be subject to a short-covering rally if short-sellers are unable to find enough metal to roll-over their positions,” he added.
Elsewhere, broad weakness in lead, nickel and copper prices has taken effect, with lead’s three-month price edging 1.7% lower during the morning session.
Continued uncertainty surrounding trade relations between the United States and China have added further bearish sentiment toward base metals, deterring investor sentiment amid worries of a slowdown in global economic growth.
Pledging retaliatory measures against the US this morning, China’s intentions to raise anti-dumping tariff rates on certain optical fiber products from the North American country could spur further discord between the world’s two largest economies.
That said, a sharp rebound in tin prices has been largely incongruous with the rest of complex’ losses, with the metal climbing 0.8% over the morning and making a firm approach back towards $20,000 per tonne.
A rising LME inventory count had supported tin’s gradual decline in prices over the June-July period, with total stocks at their highest since April 2017.
But this morning’s fresh cancelation of 175 tonnes across Port Klang and Rotterdam has added further weight to a potential rebound rally for tin. Zinc, lead prices drag; tin recovers
Currency moves and data releases