Good Analysis on the Zinc and Lead Market
posted on
May 09, 2009 06:59AM
Development and mining of base metal and precious metal deposits in the Americas.
UBS analyst sees slow, stable rise in zinc, lead demand, prices |
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Las Vegas (Platts)--30Apr2009 Zinc and lead consumption and prices will steadily rise over the next three years as economic recovery is slated to start toward the end of 2009 and into 2010, metals analyst at UBS Bank, Robin Bhar, told delegates at the 2009 ISRI Convention and Exposition in Las Vegas, Nevada, late Wednesday. "Glancing at the 2010 numbers we see a return to growth, 2010 we see as the year for recovery," he said. "But the growth will be sub-par, or sub- normal." In the US, he saw the recovery beginning in the fourth quarter of the year, when "we should see the famous green shoots of recovery," he said, driven by "massive injections of liquidity." "If you throw enough money at the problem it will solve that problem," Bhar said. "And secondly, interest rates around the world will stay relatively low, perhaps even close to zero." But the economic growth will come at a cost, and Bhar warned against the devaluation of currency, projecting that the US dollar would weaken in the coming months. Financial growth will impact lead and zinc demand and assist in a price recovery for both metals, Bhar said. "In 2009, there was a fair amount of contraction taking place in global zinc demand, with just over a 10% contraction in demand, due to weakness in the automotive, building and construction sectors," Bhar said. Unlike in the past, zinc producers have reacted to market conditions quickly, he added. "This cycle is different, we estimate that at least 1 million mt of zinc mine and smelter production has come offline and this has helped to balance the market." Global zinc surplus in 2009 is expected to amount to 300,000 mt. That surplus is expected to shrink significantly in 2010 -- when Bhar anticipates a 5% recovery in global zinc consumption -- to a surplus of just 100,000 mt . Bhar saw zinc prices at $1,200/mt this year, $1,300/mt in 2010 and $1,500/mt in 2011. Lead prices, too, would stage a modest recovery over the next three years, Bhar said. He noted that lead consumption hasn't been hit as much as zinc by a weak automotive sector. Lead is a key component in replacement batteries. "Lead is slightly different to zinc in that the major consumption for lead is lead batteries in the automotive sector," Bhar said. "Replacement battery demand is about 40% of global lead demand and that demand has held up pretty well during this period." He forecast that lead prices would reach $1,000/mt this year, before stabilizing at an average of $1,200/mt by 2010 and strengthen to $1,400/mt in 2011. The analyst conceded that substitution of lead acid batteries could come in the form of nickel cadmium batteries, but added that such substitutions would be limited to smaller applications, such as radios, and were unlikely to replace lead batteries in automotive applications anytime soon. "We are still many years away from developing a viable substitute for lead acid batteries. It won't happen in the next five-10 years," he said. --Meghann McDonell, meghann_mcdonell@platts.com |