‘Nickel emerging as best bet for investors’

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Bloomberg

Nickel’s rally is only just getting started, making the metal an attractive bet for investors, according to Jinchuan Group, China’s biggest producer of the refined metal.
Tightening global supplies because of a mining clampdown in the Philippines and rising demand from the stainless steel industry in China will push prices higher even after they climbed 35 percent from February lows, Chairman Yang Zhiqiang wrote in a statement on the company’s website. China consumes about half of the world’s supply and the Philippines produces a fifth of it.
“Nickel’s advance is just the beginning of a long bull run, with current prices still around multi-year lows, making the metal a promising investment,” Yang wrote. The market will see shortages every year through 2020, with the deficit at 65,000 metric tons this year, Yang said, citing company data. Low prices have hurt most global producers and forced some mines and smelters to shutter, he said in the statement Wednesday.
While prices climbed to the highest in a year this month and traded at $10,285 a ton on Wednesday, they are still about 80 percent below the record of more than $50,000 in 2007. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and UBS Group AG also expect prices to advance as mines close in the Philippines because of the environmental crackdown by President Rodrigo Duterte.
Duterte, who took office on June 30, and Environment & Natural Resources Secretary Gina Lopez want to ensure all mines comply with environmental and welfare standards, and so far eight nickel ore mines have been suspended. UBS estimated these account for about 10 percent of the country’s nickel output, or 2 percent of worldwide supply, according to an Aug. 12 report. A nationwide audit is scheduled for completion by the end of the month.
After prices sank more than 40 percent last year, producers led by Jinchuan pledged to reduce supply by at least 20 percent in 2016, and output in China is expected to drop to 550,000 tons this year, Yang said. China is also cracking down on pollution in the nickel pig iron industry and utilization rates at smelters in the provinces of Shandong, Inner Mongolia and Jiangsu are at 30 percent, Yang said.
China’s production of stainless steel, used in everything from kitchen sinks to skyscrapers, expanded 7 percent to a record
11.6 million tons in the first half of the year, according to Beijing
Antaike Information Development Co. Stainless-steel accounts for about 65 percent of nickel first use, UBS estimates.

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