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Metal lead price as of today: lead not heavy enough to rise in price

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london metal exchange lead price

Heavy metal prices rose by 4% only during the last trading session, but even that is not enough to offset the 14% decline since the beginning of 2022. At the end of the previous trading session, the London metal exchange lead price rose by 3.57% to $1,993 per ton. 

At the same time, according to TradeEconomics, lead has fallen by $322.75/ton, or 13.81% since the beginning of 2022. The outlook for the metal is heavily influenced by expectations of a recession in the global economy, which will reduce consumption of industrial metals in general. There was also a rise in lead metal prices in India. 

Metal lead price adjustment

80% of modern lead is used in the manufacture of batteries. Lead is also often used to clad tanks where corrosive liquids are stored, and as protection against X-rays and gamma rays. Australia, China and the United States are the largest producers of lead, followed by Peru, Canada, Mexico, Sweden, Morocco, South Africa and North Korea. 

Lead is also used in the construction industry and in the manufacture of munitions, fuel tanks, and pipelines. Because of its catalytic properties, lead is also used to convert chemical energy into electrical energy. However, in addition to all these advantages, lead has one significant disadvantage: It is very harmful to human health.

Lead will remain under pressure

After plummeting in June, the price dynamics on the market stabilized. Since early July, the price of LME lead futures has risen by 4.8% m/m to $1,998.5 per ton.

June saw an improvement in the Chinese auto market, which supported the lead market. Auto sales rose 23.8% YoY to 2.502 million units. Production was up 28.2% y/y to 2.499 million (CAAM data). This boosted demand for batteries and the secondary supply of lead.

In Europe and the U.S., the market for the metal remains tight – influenced by declining production due to expensive energy. Also, lower car production is limiting consumption. Auto sales in the EU fell 15.4% in June to a record low for the month (ACEA). Supply chain problems continue to limit car production.

At the same time, lead premiums in the European and American markets remained high and consumption in Europe showed a slight rebound –

Metal inventories at the LME are down 0.8% since the beginning of July, while lead prices at the Shanghai metal exchange are up 14.1%. 

In the coming months, the lead market will remain under selling pressure due to the mass exodus of investors from the commodity markets because of changes in regulatory policies and expectations of a slowdown of the global economy. We can expect a small recovery in prices by the end of the year due to seasonal factors. 

Metal lead price adjustment: Market is waiting for macroeconomic signals

Conditions were not too positive on Tuesday, July 19, before the opening of lead trading in London. Copper prices are down 0.5%, and European stock indices are also down 0.6-0.7%. All this suggests that the three-day bounce in lead prices of 8.5% from 1840 to 1998 dollars per ton we’ve seen since last Thursday will be interrupted today by a sensitive 0.5-0.7% drop in prices.

The main negative sentiment in the lead market continues to be fears of a global recession, exacerbated by persistent outbreaks of SOVID-19 in China. Given the zero tolerance policy of the Chinese authorities, this leads to expecting a double decrease in demand – both because of the global economic slowdown and, additionally, because of the epidemiological stoppages in the economy of the world’s largest consumer of lead (China accounts for 40% of global consumption of this metal).

Likely the reduction of lead prices will continue at least to the level of $1,600 per ton. This is another minus 20% from the current level of 1998 dollars per ton. This week, we can expect quotations to test last week’s lows of $1,850-1900 a ton again, and next week, in case this zone is broken down, the fall to the mid-term target will go on.



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As climate shifts, a leafhopper bug plagues Argentina’s corn fields

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By Maximilian Heath and Matias Baglietto

CORDOBA PROVINCE, Argentina (Reuters) – Global warming has brought Argentina’s corn farmers a dangerous new enemy: a yellow insect just four millimeters (0.16 inch) long that thrives in hotter temperatures and is threatening harvests of the crop. Meet the leafhopper.

The world’s No. 3 corn exporting country has slashed millions of tons from its harvest projections for the current crop due to a rare plague of the insect that can carry a stunt disease that damages the cobs and kernels of the plant.

Farmers fear such infestations could become more regular, with fewer frosts in recent years to check the insect’s spread, and forecasts for a warm winter ahead, farmers, weather experts and data analyzed by Reuters showed.

Some farmers already have said they will sow less corn for next season in favor of other crops such as soy, the South American country’s main cash crop, which is not affected by the bugs.

“Many are going to reduce their hectares of corn to zero,” said Anibal Cordoba, a producer in northern Chaco province, adding a hard freeze this winter is needed or leafhopper numbers will explode again next season.

“You normally found leafhoppers in the bud of the plants if you looked. But this year you go to the field and you find clouds of leafhopper. It’s just crazy.”

Agriculture and climate experts linked the unusual outbreak to rising global and local temperatures.

“The number of days with frost is becoming less frequent due to global temperatures rising,” said climate change specialist Matilde Rusticucci at the University of Buenos Aires, adding minimum temperatures in the country had “increased steadily”.

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“The year 2023 was declared the warmest year in history,” Rusticucci said. This helped leafhoppers spread far beyond the warmer northern regions where they usually thrive and where farmers have adapted. Some 10 million tons of Argentine corn production has been lost already, and analysts say it could fall further.

“We should be talking about an Argentine production of more than 60 million tons of corn and because of this insect we are talking about 50.5 (million tons),” said Cristian Russo, head of agricultural estimates at the Rosario grains exchange (BCR).

“We all suspect that it still could get much worse than what we’re seeing,” he added. “It’s a big blow to corn.”

According to Russo, leafhopper numbers in northern Argentina are 10 times the normal level, while the insect has been found nearly 1,500 kilometers (932 miles) south of traditional areas, where previously it had been too cold.

Argentina’s government, which did not respond to a request for comment on this story, has looked to speed authorization for pesticides to fight leafhoppers and recently met with farm associations to coordinate how to mitigate leafhopper damage.

‘THIS IS A REAL, REAL PROBLEM’

In parts of Argentina, frosts have actually increased in recent winters, but some key farming areas have had a substantial decline. Nationally, minimum temperatures have been rising and cold nights decreasing over decades.

A study by scientists at Argentine universities and state institutes showed that from 1963 to 2013 the average number of cold nights decreased from 15 days per year to around eight.

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Fewer frosty nights help leafhoppers, which cannot tolerate temperatures below 4 degrees Celsius, said Fernando Flores, entomologist at the National Institute of Agricultural Technology (INTA).

“One of the most important causes of the big increase in (insect) numbers was the decrease in the number of frosts in the country the previous winter,” Flores said.

In western central Cordoba province, the main corn region of Argentina, the provincial grain exchange has estimated leafhopper-related corn losses of $1.13 billion. Data from the Cordoba observatory show frosts down steadily over decades.

“What was planted late towards the end of December, beginning of January, was where the greatest damage was seen,” said Ramón Garcia, a farmer from the Cordoba farm town of Marcos Juarez. “There was a significant drop in yield.”

The outlook ahead is tough. Rusticucci said January, February and March 2024 already set records for global maximum temperatures.

Michael Cordonnier, Illinois-based agronomist at consultancy Soybean and Corn Advisor Inc, said what had happened with corn in Argentina was “very unusual” and it would take time for farmers there to adapt, as farmers in warmer corn-growing areas like Brazil have adapted over years.

“This is a real, real problem. Going forward, they will be able to solve this a few years down the road by getting hybrids that are more tolerant to corn stunt disease and registering more insecticides for this specific problem,” he said.

“But for the time being it’s just terrible.”

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Oil steadies as weak physical markets balance Middle East tensions

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By Alex Lawler and Deep Kaushik Vakil

LONDON (Reuters) -Oil steadied on Tuesday as weakness in the physical market countered concern about conflict in the Middle East as Israel stepped up attacks in southern Gaza and a ceasefire deal between Hamas and Israel hung in the balance.

The Israeli military seized control of the Rafah border crossing between the Gaza Strip and Egypt and its tanks pushed into the southern Gazan town of Rafah, as mediators struggled to secure a ceasefire agreement.

futures were down 30 cents, or 0.4%, at $83.03 a barrel by 1130 GMT while U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures fell 27 cents, or 0.3%, to $78.21.

“Truce remains elusive, and even if it is reached the question remains whether Houthi hostilities in the Red Sea would cease and the Suez Canal would reopen, significantly mitigating the risk of shipping throughout the region,” said Tamas Varga of oil broker PVM.

“I believe the lack of optimism of the past few days is more the result of genuine weakness in the physical markets.”

In a sign of easing concern that supply could tighten, the first-month Brent contract’s premium to the six-month contract slipped to $2.89 a barrel for its lowest since mid-February.

“Trying to use geopolitics as an excuse to buy crude oil has become an increasingly futile and costly affair for traders in recent months,” said Ole Hansen of Saxo Bank, adding that the drop in crude spreads highlights “a well supplied market, leaving the upside capped for now”.

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Last week Brent and WTI had registered their steepest weekly losses in three months as the market focused on weak U.S. jobs data and the possible timing of a Federal Reserve interest rate cut.

A stronger dollar also weighed, making crude more expensive for traders holding other currencies.

As well as Middle East tensions, the latest U.S. inventory reports will also be in focus.

oil and product stockpiles were expected to have fallen last week, a Reuters poll showed. Crude inventories could have fallen by about 1.2 million barrels in the week to May 3, based on analyst forecasts. [EIA/S]

Saudi Arabia’s move to raise official selling prices for its crude sold to Asia, Northwest Europe and the Mediterranean in June also supported prices, signalling expectations of strong demand this summer.

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Oil prices slip lower; Israel-Hamas ceasefire talks, US inventories in focus

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Investing.com– Oil prices edged lower Wednesday amid uncertainty over global production as a potential Middle East ceasefire hangs in the balance.

At  08:40 ET (12:40 GMT), fell 0.5% to $82.91 a barrel, while dropped 0.6% to $78.04 a barrel. 

Israel-Hamas ceasefire deal remains elusive 

Palestinian militant group Hamas on Monday agreed to a Gaza ceasefire proposal from mediators, but Israel said the terms did not meet its demands and undertook strikes on the city of Rafah, in southern Gaza. 

While Israel was still seen preparing for ceasefire negotiations later, the recent escalation in military action showed little actual progress towards a deal.

A lack of settlement between the parties in the now seven-month long conflict has supported oil prices, as investors worry regional escalation of the war will disrupt Middle Eastern crude supplies.

That said, little actual disruption has been seen to date, and the benchmarks posted the steepest weekly losses in three months last week as investors worried about the prospect of higher-for-longer interest rates curbing growth in the U.S., the top global oil consumer.

Russia to agree to lift production? 

The market has edged lower Tuesday after news reports said Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak indicated OPEC+ could move to raise crude production.

The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allies, known as OPEC+, are making voluntary output cuts totalling about 2.2 million barrels per day for the first half of 2024, on top of earlier reductions announced in various steps since late 2022, bringing the total pledged cuts to just under 6 million barrels per day.

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Bloomberg reported Monday that Russia’s oil and gas revenues doubled in April despite sanctions, creating room for Moscow to agree raise output, even is prices suffer as a consequence.

OPEC+ is scheduled to meet on June 1 in Vienna to decide its next output policy steps.

US inventories data due

As well as Middle East tensions, the latest U.S. inventory reports will also be in focus Tuesday.

The releases its weekly forecasts of U.S. crude oil and product stockpiles later in the session, and these are expected to have fallen.

stockpiles sprung a surprise increase the previous week, the API reported last week, with inventories rising by about 4.9 million barrels for the week ended April 26.

The Energy Information Administration will also publish its latest later in the session, which will include the EIA’s latest views on the global oil market, and its latest forecast for U.S. oil and gas production for the remainder of this year and 2025. 

(Ambar Warrick contributed to this article.) 

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