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The slightly firmer tone across the SHFE base metals complex comes after prices fell at the end of last week amid an escalation in the trade spat between China and the US, with former threatening impose fresh tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese goods.
But a lack of an immediate response from China to the latest US tariffs has provided markets with a much needed breather, allowing base metals prices to recover.
“SHFE base metals prices are correcting after last Friday’s falls, which were due to trade war headlines. A price correction is well within expectations,” a Shanghai-based analyst said.
Zinc led the gains with the metal’s most-traded contract on the SHFE rising to 20,975 yuan ($3,135) per tonne as at 9.27am Shanghai time, up by 380 yuan per tonne or 1.9% from last Friday’s close.
“Robust downstream demand for zinc has supported the rebound in this metal amid an open import window [in China],” the analyst added.
Zinc stocks at Shanghai-bonded warehouses stood at 156,000-161,000 tonnes at the end of June, down from 207,000-209,000 tonnes a month earlier, with participants actively looking to bring the metal into China to sell at a profit.
Lead was the second-best performer on the SHFE in the early session on Monday, with the metal’s most-traded August contract up by 1.8% as at 9.27am Shanghai time.
“Lead’s fundamentals remain price supportive, with falling global inventory, record low treatment charges – which suggest a tight concentrate market – and a supply deficit in the first quarter of 2018 to boot,” Metal Bulletin analyst Andy Farida said.
Base metals prices
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