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Supply fears fuel tin's rise to 22-month high

Tin rates leapt to 22month highs on Monday as the market fretted over supplies from Indonesia and moving stocks in warehouses approved by the London Metal Exchange (LME).

Traders stated profit-taking on long tin positions betting on higher prices weighed on the market later on in the session. Standard tin was down 3.5% at $34,365 a metric lot at 1610 GMT, having earlier peaked at $36,050 for its highest because June 2022.

Issue about exports from Indonesia, which accounts for approximately 18% of worldwide supplies of the soldering metal, and interruptions in Myanmar, the world's second-largest producer of mined tin, are behind the price surge.

There's a great deal of uneasiness about supplies, and stocks on the LME have been falling for some time, one tin trader stated, including that expectations of stronger demand likewise helped to create upward rate momentum.

Tin stocks in LME warehouses << MSNSTX-TOTAL > have nearly cut in half to 4,190 lots considering that December and are at their most affordable given that July last year, recommending scarcities.

Tight supply has actually also caused the premium on the LME cash tin contract versus the three-month agreement << CMSN0-3 > to leap to levels last seen in July, having actually stood at a discount earlier this month. The premium was last around $340 a heap.

LME data reveals one company holding more than 40% of open interest-- the variety of outstanding contracts due to mature or be rolled over at the next settlement date-- on long tin futures agreements for May.

Somewhere else, prices of stainless-steel ingredient nickel hit seven-month highs at $19,550 a load on escalating concerns over output in top exporter Indonesia, which accounts for more than half of international materials.

Market talk of Chinese strategies to purchase nickel for state stockpiles also supported costs on Friday.

Nickel was up 1.2% at $19,570 a heap.

In other metals, copper slid 0.5% to $9,825 a. load, aluminium alleviated 0.1% to $2,666, zinc. retreated 0.8% to $2,828 and lead lost 2.3% to $2,167.

(source: Reuters)