Key takeaways from the latest Base Metals Market 
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  Tracker 				 					  						Apr 29, 2020 | 10:17 AM  					 |  					London, Shanghai |  					  						James Moore, William Adams, Andrew Cole, Boris Mikanikrezai, Yang Cao 					 				
   				 					         Tags                base metals,               aluminium,               copper,               lead,               nickel,               tin,               zinc,               price forecasts               supply-demand balance            				
   				 					The latest forecasts from Fastmarkets’ team of analysts are ready to view.
   						Aluminium: ‘Sell the rally’ mentality here to stay  Although the London Metal Exchange aluminium price has managed to  recover modestly from recent lows, we suspect this is mostly  short-covering. The lack of producer restraint, growing exchange  inventories, a weak demand outlook and the 7 million tonnes of  oversupply forecast for 2020-2021 are likely to maintain the ‘sell the  rally’ mentality in aluminium this quarter. Our second-quarter base case  forecast remains at $1,450 per tonne.     Copper: Focus on SHFE tightness  Copper continues its rebound despite the release of catastrophic flash  manufacturing purchasing managers’ index data for April. We attribute  the recent resilience of copper prices to numerous Covid-19-related  supply disruptions (our estimate of which has grown again since last  week) as well as a tighter refined market in China.     Because the world ex-China will transition to the re-opening of their  economies as China has already done, the tightness seen on the Shanghai  Futures Exchange could ultimately transpire into the LME market. It is  in this vein that we continue to forecast copper prices extending their  rebound in the second quarter. Also in this week’s analysis we discuss  the divergence between the LME and SHFE forward price curves and update  our tally of virus-related supply disruptions.     Lead: One of the worst performers recently   Despite around two-thirds of lead supply coming from recycling - a  sector heavily disrupted globally while lockdowns inhibit scrap  collection - lead has seen one of the worst price performances of the  base metals. Lead prices are just 3% above the March low, while across  the rest of the complex prices on average are up by around 12%.     Lead’s problem is a dire demand side given its exposure to the extremely  depressed auto sector. But that means lead prices may have some  catching up to do when the auto industry gets back on its feet. We  forecast lead working back toward $2,000 per tonne by the year's end.    Nickel: Glencore-sized supply disruptions   Nickel prices remain well supported and are even positioned to push  higher again this week. Helping the tone is the scale of supply  disruptions in this market. Our estimate for refined nickel production  losses in 2020 related to Covid-19 measures has inched up to 129,000  tonnes this week, which represents 5.3% of global production. Put  another way, this is approximately equivalent to the loss the market  would feel if, for example, Glencore’s entire nickel business was shut  for a full year.     Tin: Rebound likely to continue despite oversupply  While we contend that tin’s fundamental indicators are relatively more  resilient than the other base metals, our over-arching view is that the  chief driver of the recent price rebound has been of a macro nature.  Despite a slightly negative price seasonality in the second quarter, we  think that the rebound in tin prices could continue in the near term  should the positive macro sentiment prevail, fundamental indicators  remain resilient, and supply disruptions continue to affect the tin  market.    Zinc: Latest ILZSG data overstating Chinese demand  Zinc has begun this week trading robustly, supported by constructive  technicals, Peru’s lockdown extension and broader risk-on sentiment, at  least for the time being. Zinc may also be getting some support from the  International Lead and Zinc Study Group’s (ILZSG) preliminary  January-February supply/demand data, which was not too bad. But we  suspect the group is overstating Chinese demand.      Click here to view the Base Metals Market Tracker in full. If you are not a subscriber but would like see a free sample report,  please click here.
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