© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A worker walks past an aluminum ingot warehouse at the Dunkerque aluminum smelter in Loon-Plage near Dunkirk, France on September 22, 2022. REUTERS/Pascal Rossignol/File Photo
Posted by Pratima Desai
LONDON (Reuters) – Industrial metals markets hoping for better demand and higher prices may have to wait a few more months, with headwinds from slower growth likely to dominate the economic landscape for some time.
Since hitting record highs in March on a rally fueled by concerns about disruption to commodity supplies from Russia, it has fallen 22%, aluminum 41% and zinc 39%.
Nickel and tin declined by 50% and 70%, respectively. The battery metal lead, buoyed by tight supplies, lower inventories and its inclusion in the commodity index from January, has fared better, down just 15% since March.
Spiraling inflation, a Covid shutdown in China, China’s two largest consumers, and skyrocketing interest rates behind economic weakness and waning demand growth for industrial metals such as copper, used in the energy and construction industries.
Bank of America (NYSE:) analysts said in a note: “The overall picture in 2023 is in harmony with 2022, and many of the crises that arose this year will reverberate in the next year.”
However, the BoA noted that metal prices have already fallen significantly and will overtake energy in the first half of next year.
The sudden reaction to the recent facilities to control the Corona virus in China was to raise the prices of metals such as aluminum, which are used in transportation, packaging and construction, but the high number of infections prompted a rethink.
Higher interest rates in the US mean a stronger US currency; Double whammy for copper in the dollar, which was trading at $8,450 a ton at 1210 GMT, aluminum at $2,420, zinc at $3,000, lead at $2,290, tin at $25,350 and nickel at $30,530.
“We expect copper to drop to $7,800 a ton over the next three months as the end of finished goods restocking, increased smelter production, seasonal weakness, and weak global end-use consumption drive the market into overhang,” Citi analysts said in a report. note.
Nickel’s picture was tainted by March’s trading failure on the London Metal Exchange, which created a crisis of confidence in the contract that sent volumes and liquidity slipping.
“While these conditions persist, we can expect continued episodes of higher volatility in nickel prices, although we believe our bearish fundamental view will eventually prevail,” Citi said.
Nickel is mainly used to make stainless steel, and is now a basic material for electric vehicle batteries.
For solder tin, the main topic is consumer belt tension, which has affected the demand for electronic goods.
“Slowing demand (for tin) is perhaps best illustrated by global semiconductor bills, which have fallen 18% by September, since hitting an all-time high in February,” Macquarie analysts said in a note.