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Fortis Bank Reports

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 Most Recent Report - April 2009  

Metals and plastics - Strategic view


Introduction
After the mauling base metals prices received in Q4 2008, Q1 2009 has seen a return to growth, but not on any tangible pick up in real demand. In fact it has been based largely on sentiment that China is on the road to economic recovery that will in itself compensate for the collapse in Western demand. This has been supported by successive high Chinese monthly imports of refined metal, leading to drawdowns in LME stocks, while China's manufacturing purchasing manager index has crept above the important 50 mark in March, which denotes economic growth rather than contraction. However, neither are as positive as they seem: China's imports are to feed its huge state and consumer restocking programmes while the pick up in PMI is not surprising given that even the most pessimistic forecasts have China growing at 5%. The rally in base metals has been augmented by the covering of short positions built up in Q4 2008, which bet that metals prices would decline further than they actually have. Should real demand not pick up before China ends its restocking exercise then we expect a sharp fall in prices.

Gold
Gold is now no higher than it began the year when measured in dollars; in other currencies it has done a bit better. With the financial and economic outlook somewhat brightening, the going might get tougher, unless fears of inflation grow. That the IMF wants to sell 12.9 Moz of gold was not news but the G20 meeting has removed all doubt; the only question is timing.

Silver
Silver still seems to us overvalued, although the recovery in industrial metals must be having some positive impact on its 'real value'. Investment flows remain strong.

Platinum
Platinum's recovery continues on the brighter economic outlook and a relative recovery in European car sales. These have been artificially boosted by government programmes and will surely fall back later in the year; but for now they have been helping platinum. Investors have taken note; the potential for a US platinum ETF is also positive.

Palladium
Palladium in March did even better than platinum, for similar reasons but with less of an investment boost although Nymex futures net longs are showing signs of life.

Aluminium
Aluminium at recent price levels looks fragile. Although it is only at levels last seen at the start of the year, it has increased almost $200/t from February lows to more than $1,450/t in early April; with short sellers being squeezed out the price may go higher still. However, the metal's fundamentals remain extremely discouraging and we therefore expect a significant fall to sub $1,200/t levels when China ends its current restocking exercise.

Copper
Copper likewise is due a fall. Sentiment has been boosted by the large inflows of refined metal into China, with the copper price rising by more than $995/t in Q1 2009 to set a high of $4,160/t on 27th March and more than $4,400/t in early April. This rally has been based on factors that do not spell long-term recovery, such as China's State Reserves Bureau (SRB) restocking, dwindling scrap imports, and the consequential arbitrage trade between the higher Shanghai price and that of the LME. Resultant short covering has left the price overvalued by at least $1,000/t, in our view.

Nickel
Growing LME stocks, rising prices and poor demand from the stainless steel sector leaves nickel out in the cold and due a fall. There is not much besides potential SRB stockpiling and sentiment that will support prices, although the price may spike on short covering. After already cutting 20% of mined output as a proportion of total 2008 production, miners may be faced with making further painful cuts in order to rebalance the market.

Lead and zinc
Zinc has similarly benefited from SRB re-stocking and resultant high imports, and the price has gained almost 19% since the start of the year to early April. Production cuts have been fierce and the still low price may force further marginal operations to close, especially since by-product acid prices have collapsed, which has hit smelter profits further. This should keep prices closely tied, but above $1,100/t. Lead's relative strength in recent weeks has been almost entirely based on demand from the replacement battery sector. This seasonal demand is drawing to a close. The price of lead is up a whopping 28% since the beginning of March, leaving it exposed to a sharp correction.

Tin
Lower production and high imports in China have supported the tin price, which is still some way off its long-term average. However, with Indonesian tin exports up 29% year-on-year in March, the risk is to the downside.

Steel
Crude steel production has been cut severely as orders have dried up, while prices have remained depressed, despite a slight rally in late March and April. World crude steel output fell 22% in February to 84 Mt, early March indications are worse. China, meanwhile, reined in its production in February, as the anticipated stimulus-led increase in demand did not materialise, leaving a mountain of surplus metal from January.

Plastics
Supply disruptions on top of voluntary cuts have seen a tightening of the polymer market and hence a strengthening of plastics prices across the board. However, demand is still weak and any gains may be short-lived.

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