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July 24, 2016

Nothing wrong with #China #copper imports after Q2 2016 released

From Paradigm Capital  

On Wednesday , a day after the ICSG,China released June import numbers, announcing a surprising surge in copper demand of 6% y/y for the first 4 months of 2016, 

 

Details: While imports in total were down from the previous month in June they were up 20% from the previous year. Q2 copper imports in all forms, refined, scrap and in concentrate, totaled 2.3M tonnes the third largest quarterly  import level  and a record Q2. First half 2016 imports now total 4.7M tonnes beating the previous high of 4M tonnes recorded in 2014 and up 24% from last year which proved to be a record year at 8.6M tonnes.

 

Conclusion: Nothing wrong with Chinese copper demand.


July 6, 2016

Commitment of Traders #Gold, data to Jun 28/16 #COT



Updated Commitment of Traders (data to Jun 28/16) attached, courtesy of Paradigm Capital
For the third week in a row, new records are being set...
The Speculative (Non-Commercial) Long position hit a record 373,128 contracts and the Net Speculative Position (Non Commercial Long minus Non-Commercial Short) hit a record 301,920 contracts.
(Record as far back as the data we have, which goes back to 1993)

June 28, 2016

#Zinc - Treatment charges falling due to lack of concentrate

Charges fell from over US$ 200 per tonne in May 2015 to US$ 115 per tonne currently

Falling treatment charges are a sign that smelters are having troubles to find concentrate for their smelters.

Treatment zinc charges fell from over US$ 200 per tonne in May 2015 to US$ 115 per tonne currently. The zinc spot reached a low of US$0.66 per pound in January 2016 (see attachment 1) and recovered to currently US$ 0.91 per pound. Attachment 2 shows how LME zinc warehouse stocks have fallen since August 2015.

 

Canadian companies with a higher component of revenues coming from zinc are:

 

Teck Resouces (TCK/B)

HudBay Minerals (HBM)

Lundin Mining (LUN)

Trevali Mining (TV)

and soon

Nevsun Resources (NSU)

 

FROM SCOTIABANK:

 

- Zinc (Spot) Treatment Charges Fall as Supply Tightens Even More:  Zinc concentrate treatment charges (TCs) are down in May and into June as supply tightened though spot trades were scarce.  Chinese smelters were not willing buyers at the lower terms for concentrates.  Zinc TCs are now at ~$115/t (CIF deliver to Chinese ports). This is the discount on refined prices miners grant to smelters to cover the cost of turning concentrate into metal.  This is down from ~$130/t level around 6 weeks ago.  Zinc concentrate imports to China are also facing headwinds via a negative arbitrage between London and Shanghai.  They are relying on inventories, domestic mine supply and port stocks to meet their needs.  According to market participants average stocks at most domestic smelters are widely reported to be around one month, down from 30-40 days to two months in April. 

 

Spot concentrate to China not as desirable due to the negative LME/SHFE arb and low incentive (i.e. low TCs).  Chinese smelters are pulling on domestic supply, inventories and port stocks.  Scotia Mining Sales thinks zinc concentrate TCs (via a continued tightening of concentrate inventories) will remain low.  Total global zinc stocks is likely to trend lower (see chart below). 

 

Total global zinc stocks are now at 734kt which is -2.2% YTD and -4.2% YoY.  Total global zinc inventories are down 53% from their peak levels in December 2012.

Source: LME, SHFE, Comex, Bloomberg, Scotiabank GCM, Charts Created by Scotiabank Mining Sales

 


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