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Investment funds turn bearish on over-supplied lead and zinc
Investment funds turn bearish on over-supplied lead and zinc

Reuters

time28-04-2025

  • Business
  • Reuters

Investment funds turn bearish on over-supplied lead and zinc

LONDON, April 28 (Reuters) - Fund managers have turned increasingly negative on lead and zinc's price outlook and the latest forecasts from the International Lead and Zinc Study Group will do little to change their minds. Both metals are expected to be in supply surplus this year, a turnaround for zinc but the third consecutive year of over-supply for the lead market. here. The two metals are geological sisters, as they tend to be sourced from the same mines. Right now, they are also bound by weak demand. ILZSG, which has just met for one of its twice-yearly catch-ups, estimates both metals experienced falling usage in 2024 and the group is forecasting only a modest recovery this year. ZINC LOSES ITS SHINE Zinc has under-performed the rest of the London Metal Exchange base metals pack so far this year. After sliding to a one-year low of $2,515.50 per metric ton earlier this month, LME three-month zinc has since recovered to $2,636.00, but is still down by 11% on the start of January. Fund managers have cut long positions and scaled up bearish bets into the recent price weakness. The collective net long has shrunk from almost 41,000 contracts in the middle of March to just 1,781. Zinc market dynamics did not turn out as expected last year, a third year of falling mine production restraining metal output and pulling the market into a small 15,000-ton deficit. That will turn to a 93,000-ton surplus this year, according to ILZSG. Global mine output is forecast to grow by a robust 4.3% year-on-year, feeding a 1.8% rise in refined metal production. There are signs this turnaround is already happening. Spot smelter treatment charges have bounced higher from last year's record lows, signalling improved availability of mined concentrate. Chinese smelters have pounced on the extra supply with first-quarter imports of zinc concentrates up by 37% year-on-year in the first quarter of 2025. However, zinc demand will not be enough to absorb the extra supply. ILZSG is forecasting usage to rise by just 1.0% in 2025, a significant downgrade from the 1.6% rate expected at the Group's September 2024 meet. Zinc's problem is that 55% of global demand comes in the form of galvanised steel for construction, a sector that is weak everywhere, not least in China. Moreover, the group said even its modest forecast growth rate may be optimistic if global economic growth slows "due to uncertainties linked to trade policy". MORE WEIGHT FOR HEAVY METAL Lead's demand profile is quite different from that of its sister metal with automotive batteries accounting for 65% of total usage and replacement demand accounting for around 75% of that. Weak automotive sales and an underlying shift towards electric vehicles, which use smaller lead-acid batteries than internal combustion cars, combined to drag global lead demand down by 0.8% last year. ILZSG is expecting a return to 1.5% growth in 2025 on the back of stronger passenger car production in the West and China. But refined production will rise by a faster 1.9%, generating an expected 82,000-ton supply surplus. The lift in mined zinc output this year will inevitably mean more lead and ILZSG forecasts mined lead supply will grow by 2.3% in 2025. A forecast third year of lead over-supply will reinforce funds' bear positioning in the LME market. Investors were net short of LME lead to the tune of a record 25,700 contracts in January. Many got burned as LME three-month metal rose to $2,100 per ton in March but the early-April collapse to a two-and-a-half year low of $1,837.50 has seen the bears return. The net short has grown back to over 23,000 contracts. SHRINKING PREMIUM The lead price has proved surprisingly resilient given conspicuous surplus in the form of elevated exchange inventory. LME three-month metal is trading marginally up on the start of January. That has shifted the relative-value trade between the sister metals with zinc's premium over lead contracting from over $1,000 per ton in December to $668. With so much lead demand coming from replacement batteries, the heavy metal is less vulnerable to the sort of macro turbulence highlighted by the ILZSG in its zinc forecasts. Moreover, funds are already so bearish on lead's price prospects, it's hard to see how much more selling they can muster. Zinc, by contrast, is a market in supply transition and funds have only started turning bearish as evidence of that shift in dynamics accumulates. Just how more bearish they could become remains to be seen.

Zinc's high premium to sister metal lead may not last: Andy Home
Zinc's high premium to sister metal lead may not last: Andy Home

Reuters

time27-01-2025

  • Business
  • Reuters

Zinc's high premium to sister metal lead may not last: Andy Home

LONDON, Jan 27 (Reuters) - Lead and zinc may be geological sister metals but their market fortunes have been very different in recent months. London Metal Exchange (LME) three-month zinc rallied to a 20-month high of $3,284 per metric ton in October on the back of an acutely tight raw materials market. LME lead , by contrast, headed in the opposite direction, weighed down by a mountain of exchange stocks. Zinc's premium to lead stretched to over $1,000 per ton during the fourth quarter of 2024, the widest gap since February 2023. Although the two metals mostly come from the same mines, divergent narratives of under-supply in zinc and oversupply in lead have caused funds to position accordingly and cement the price disparity. Both metals are down on the start of January but zinc has fallen harder and the premium to lead contracted to $888.50 at the Friday close. What happens next to the sisterly trade may be an ugly contest as zinc's mine supply recovers and the lead glut grows. ZINC SUPPLY STRESS Zinc's October rally contained an element of positional poker, opens new tab on the London market. The outright price high coincided with a sharp contraction in time-spreads, the cash-to-three months period flaring out to a backwardation of $63.50 per ton. But that's not to say that price move wasn't underpinned by genuine tightness in the zinc concentrates. Indeed, the rally was partly triggered by another supply hit, opens new tab after fires at South African producer Sibanye Stillwater's (SSWJ.J), opens new tab Century mine in Australia. Global zinc mine production fell for the third straight year in 2024, forcing smelters to accept ever lower fees for processing concentrate into refined metal. Chinese metal production was sliding even before a group of the country's top 14 operators agreed in August to adjust operating rates in a bid to preserve margins. The country's refined zinc output tumbled by almost 7% year-on-year in 2024, according to local data provider Shanghai Metal Market. Lower Chinese run-rates dragged the global zinc market into a supply-demand deficit of 33,000 tons in the first 11 months of the year, according to the latest assessment from the International Lead and Zinc Study Group (ILZSG). LME zinc stocks, both registered and off-warrant, peaked at 367,000 tons in August and fell to 324,000 at the end of November. LEAD GLUT LME lead stocks have grown exponentially over the last two years. Combined on- and off-warrant inventory rose from just 29,000 tons at the start of 2023 to 305,000 tons at the end of November 2024. The relentless inventory build was only briefly interrupted in August 2024, when China imported significant amounts of metal for the first time since 2019. Indian brand metal has accounted for much of the increase, its share of registered LME stocks rising from zero at the start of 2023 to 52% at the end of 2024. Who knew there was so much lead around? The scale of stocks increase is puzzling, given the ILZSG assesses global supply and demand to have been almost balanced in the first 11 months of 2024. Moreover, primary lead smelters are suffering from the same margin squeeze as zinc producers because of the overlap in the two metals' mine production profile. The most likely cause of the stocks surge is the opaque secondary production sector, which accounts for a much higher ratio of supply in the lead market than any other industrial metal. Whatever the origin, the bearish optics of high and rising inventory has encouraged funds to take massive bets on still lower prices. Investment players are holding a record net long on the LME lead contract. MINDING THE GAP By contrast, funds are sticking with zinc's bull narrative and are still significantly net long on the LME zinc contract. However, the narrative is starting to shift. Zinc mine supply is turning a corner and is forecast by ILZSG to recover strongly this year thanks to a combination of new mines and restarts of idled facilities. Although global mine production was 370,000 tons lower in the first 11 months of 2024, monthly production started rising over the back end of the year. If concentrates availability improves, zinc smelter output growth will regain momentum and zinc's relative scarcity premium over sister metal lead should recede. That is, if lead market optics don't deteriorate even further. More zinc mine supply will inevitably mean more lead mine supply with the potential for further exchange stocks build. Neither metal is blessed with particularly strong demand dynamics at the moment. Lead usage is dominated by demand for batteries in the automotive sector, where lithium-powered electric vehicles are driving sales growth. Around half of all zinc is used in the construction sector, which is weak just about everywhere, particularly in China. ILZSG estimates that global zinc usage rose by a modest 0.7% year-on-year in January-November 2024, while lead usage fell by 1.3%. With little excitement on the demand side, supply narratives will continue to play the dominant role in the relative value trade between the two metals. But the geological link between lead and zinc means they will both be impacted by a recovery in mine production this year. It's just a matter of which proves most resilient in price. The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters.

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