Lead Posts Toxic Returns Amid China’s Trade War, Slowing E-Bike Sales

 | Oct 11, 2018 18:33

It’s one of the most toxic metals known to man. And investors who took positive bets on lead this year are now feeling its poisonous effects on their portfolios.

Down 26 percent this year on worries over demand from China—its top market, currently writhing from what could also be described as a noxious trade war with the United States—UK-traded lead is at the bottom of Investing.com’s performance table for 34 commodities.

“Lead has been among the worst performing metals year-to-date, even though inventories are falling and mine supply is tight,” Bank of America-Merrill Lynch said in a note this week that put lead on the 18th spot among 21 base metals.

h3 Weak Start In China/h3

The US investment bank said that while China’s weak start for lead demand this year has resulted in headwinds for the metal, mine supplies were still not abundant and production of refined lead was down 4.0 percent both year-on-year and year-to-date. The BofAML note said:

“China's refined lead inventories have been falling, which has kept the import arbitrage for refined metal open...Taken together, these dynamics should increasingly support quotations after the recent correction.”

At Wednesday’s settlement, three-month lead futures on the London Metal Exchange were at $1,911.50 a tonne, down from the 2017 close of $2.,496. Investing.com’s daily technical outlook has a “Strong Sell” recommendation, with Fibonacci Level 3 support—the strongest—set as low as $1,876.67, meaning there was potential for the metal to lose another $35, or nearly 2 percent, before a rebound.

h3 First Year of Loss In Three/h3

It wasn’t always like this for lead. In fact, this is the first year in three that it has experienced such phenomenal losses. The metal posted a 24 percent gain in 2017 and a 13 percent climb the year before.