Insight
Pre-LME week 2020 metals review
Report summary
In anticipation of our virtual forum on October 21 for LME Week, we have compiled our view on the themes and issues confronting the industry. After a tumultuous 9 months there is much to write about – and although it does not make for hugely positive reading in the here-and-now, there are rays of positivity for the sector on the horizon. This insight provides a high-level summary of Wood Mackenzie’s near-to-mid-term outlooks for the Base Metals, Gold, Lithium and Cobalt as well as the macro trends having a profound impact on the sector.
Table of contents
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Will the coronavirus reverberations provide an opportunity to (re)align with stakeholders?
- In a year of unprecedented challenges, the industry finds itself at a crossroads
- Consumption has been knocked, the supply response has been sluggish, but there is a gold lining
- and an (EV) light at the end of the tunnel
- Is vertical integration the answer?
- Decarbonisation could be about to accelerate
- The industry is at a crossroads
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A new flashpoint in the global struggle for power and influence
- Verisk Maplecroft is observing both operators and investors in the metals and mining sector having to navigate increasingly choppy geopolitical waters, as a new era of strategic competition in the international arena builds steam.
- Geopolitical aftershocks?
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Pan(dem)ic buying may not be the best solution
- The primary aluminium market is set for multi-year surpluses reaching a cumulative 7Mt by 2023. Will there finally be a supply side response?
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The worst is over or is it still to come?
- Considering the trajectory of the copper price since the March lows, one could be forgiven for thinking that the world is not in a recession
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A smorgasbord of upside, but a cliff edge on the horizon
- Prior to the coronavirus outbreak, peak gold supply was becoming a real possibility. This hadn’t factored in a global pandemic that would shutter or disrupt nearly 80 gold mines!
- Going down like a balloon?
- While demand appears to be lead-lined, supply has taken quite a hit from coronavirus shutdowns. While we don’t expect prices to plummet any recovery will certainly be weighed down by structural oversupply.
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Another pothole in the road
- Lithium
- Cobalt
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Half empty or half empty ?
- With metal stocks building and no supply correction in sight, the industry is setting itself up for a considerable and long-lasting hangover.
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A tarnished year and a lack-lustre period to come
- Mine output > smelter production > consumption = market surplus. A simple equation sending a clear signal to the industry in 2021
Tables and charts
This report includes 10 images and tables including:
- Metals’ role as an enabler, beneficiary or inhibitor?
- Percentage change in verbal conflicts in Jan-Aug 2020 versus 2017-2019 baseline
- Critical mineral supply security is moving up the political agenda
- Non-fundamental’s driving the LME aluminium price
- Battery/Plug-in hybrid EV sales vs Internal Combustion Engine (ICE) sales
What's included
This report contains:
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