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China's association of tin producers says the price hike is "unreasonable".

An industry association backed by the Chinese government said that on Tuesday, the tin sector had been hit by the "unreasonable",?price rise and urged investors to avoid excessive?speculative trade.

Tin prices are at their highest "levels" in 44 months, following a wave supply disruptions. The material is used to solder circuit boards for mobile phones and electric cars.

The China Nonferrous Metals Association's tin branch posted a statement to its WeChat page saying that the rapid price rise was driven by money, which has distorted industry fundamentals and increased market risks.

The report called for all participants in the market to "avoid following trends blindly" and "resist speculative activity that violates objective laws of the markets".

On December 22, the?most active tin contract at the Shanghai Futures Exchange reached 347,500?yuan ($49.438.75 per metric ton), its highest price since April 7, 2020.

On December 19, the benchmark price for three-month tin on the London Metal Exchange reached its highest level since April 19th, 2022. It was $43,935 per ton.

Shanghai and London prices are up 12% and 10% respectively so far this month.

It said that the supply from major producers such as Myanmar and the Democratic Republic of Congo has improved. Tin ores from Myanmar's Wa state have increased to almost 1,000 tons.

It said that China's refined-tin production in the first 11 months of the year rose by 6.2% compared to the previous period. Global tin demand is expected grow by 3%. This leaves a surplus of 10,000 tons.

The association stated that "the sharp price increase has increased cost pressure for downstream consumers and eroded their profits, making it difficult to meet long-term agreements." Reporting by Amy Lv, Ryan Woo and Neil Fullick. Editing by Neil Fullick.

(source: Reuters)