What about TCs and refined growth?
In the Chinese import market, concentrate imports have started to recover since July to 272kt (physical weight). Hence, we have seen a mild increase in spot treatment charges (TCs) in July to US$160-170/tonne; however, they are heading downward again this week with some offers reported at USD$140-150/tonne. Having said that, the current TCs are only about half of the level seen in 4Q19 before Covid-19 hit.
Hence it would be hard to see a strong growth return in refined productions and this has lead us to chop off refined supply growth forecast too. We expect tight concentrate supply to continue and TCs are likely to be faced with mounting pressure, particularly towards 4Q20 when smelters usually start to replenish stock before winter.
So far, mining activities in Australia - the world's largest zinc mining country has remained overall intact sending more concentrate from its inventory to China. Going forward, the question remains how much more can Australia export beyond its existing contractual shipment.
Recently, there have been some talks about blending somewhere at Chinese ports. According to a Bloomberg report, copper concentrate Chinese companies are trying to blend high arsenic concentrate with cleaner concentrate at some ports such as Fangchenggang in Guangxi. The question is whether this also applies to zinc so that heavy-metal content concentrate will somehow be allowed to blend at ports.
Currently, China puts a threshold on cadmium content less than 0.3% in concentrate imports. However, things remain to be seen given that Beijing has been stricter in pollution standards in recent years.