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Tin at 3-1/2-year High on Congo Mine Supply Fears

Tin at 3-1/2-year High on Congo Mine Supply Fears
Tin at 3-1/2-year High on Congo Mine Supply Fears

The price of tin rose to its highest level in over three-and-a-half years on Friday, as fears of shortages were stoked by talk of mine supply disruptions occurring in the Democratic Republic of Congo. However, traders denied rumors of a force majeure.

As of 1046 GMT, the London Metal Exchange reported that three-month tin was up by 1.9% to $38,760 per metric tonne. Metal used for circuit-board soldering jumped as high as 2.3% in the morning session, to $38,930. This is the highest since May 9, 2020.

Broker Marex stated in a report that the extension of the ban on manual mining to two DRC provinces, and the escalating conflict east of the DRC have "raised concern about disruptions in transport from the Bisie Mine which accounts for around 8% of global production of tin ore."

However, traders denied that the Bisie mine had declared force majeure.

Marex said that although Myanmar's Wa State issued mining permits, the actual production resume is significantly delayed due to rainy season issues, equipment problems, and labour shortages.

Other metals also broke through $11,000 per ton, with copper reaching $11,010, after China's Smelter Group announced that its members will reduce mine-fed production by 10%. As of 1046 GMT the metal used for power and construction rose 0.5% to $10,998.50, on track for a weekly increase of 2%, and an increase of 1% in this month.

John Meyer, an analyst at SP Angel, said: "I can see copper reaching $11,000 before Christmas again and then pushing up to $11,500 by the beginning of next year." He cited a number of mine supply restrictions.

Shanghai Futures Exchange monitors copper inventories in warehouses The bourse reported on Friday that the number of tons traded in the last week fell by 11.5% to 97 930.

Zinc increased by 0.6%, to $3,031, and aluminium rose by 0.6%, to $2,844.50. Nickel rose 0.4% to 14,885 while lead grew 0.2% to 1,991. (Reporting and editing by Sonia Cheema, Maju Samuel and Sonia Cheema; Additional reporting by Polina Duan and Dylan Duan)

(source: Reuters)