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Santacruz Silver Mining Ltd V.SCZ

Alternate Symbol(s):  SZSMF

Santacruz Silver Mining Ltd. is a Canada-based company, which is engaged in the operation, acquisition, exploration and development of mineral properties in Latin America. The Bolivian operations are comprised of the Bolivar, Porco and the Caballo Blanco Group, which consists of the Tres Amigos, Reserva and Colquechaquita mines. The Soracaya exploration project and San Lucas ore sourcing and trading business are also in Bolivia. Bolivar Mine is located in the state of Oruro in Bolivia, and municipality of Antequera. Paved roads connect Bolivar to the capital city La Paz (298 kilometers), Oruro City (75 kilometers) and Poopo Rail Station (22 kilometers), which is the concentrate warehouse and dispatch. The Caballo Blanco project consists of three separate mines and one process plant operating as one to produce Zinc and Lead concentrates. The mine is 34 mining concessions covering an area of 5,139 hectares, including the highly prospective 337-hectare Santa Gorgonia 1 concession.


TSXV:SCZ - Post by User

Comment by Blazesbon Jan 25, 2023 4:44am
177 Views
Post# 35244365

RE:LME Zinc Inventories

RE:LME Zinc InventoriesIt is slow here these days so i thought i'd post this article explaining current low zinc inventories.  When interest in SCZ resumes investors will have, at these rising prices, cause to pay attention to the zinc factor in the SCZ share price.

By Eric Onstad
 
LONDON, Jan 17 (Reuters) - London Metal Exchange zinc inventories have tumbled to the lowest levels in more than three decades, but rising stocks and tepid demand in top metals consumer China are helping to dampen concern about potential shortages.
 
Shutdowns of some European zinc smelters this year due to high power prices has been a key reason behind low LME stocks of the metal mostly used for galvanising steel.
 
Three-month LME zinc CMZN3 rallied along with other base metals in recent weeks as speculators cheered the reopening of China from COVID-19 restrictions, touching the highest in over four months on Monday.
 
Some investors have also highlighted a slide in LME zinc stocks, which have plummeted 89% over the past 12 months to 20,000 tonnes, the weakest since July 1989.
 
Normally, that would set alarm bells ringing, but LME spreads are not reacting as if there were severe shortages.
 
"You'd think if LME stocks are so low you'd get a big backwardation, so the fact that you haven't got that, is a fairly clear signal that there's more metal out there than we can see on the LME," said Dan Smith, head of research at Amalgamated Metals Trading.
 
LME spreads typically surge into sharp backwardations - where spot prices exceed those in the futures market - when LME stocks are low as traders scramble to line up supplies.
 
In fact, the backwardation of the zinc benchmark spread - the cash LME contract to three months futures - has eased to $19 a tonne from $127 in August.
 
Inventories in China have been rising in recent weeks, including on the Shanghai Futures Exchange, which has seen a near doubling of stocks to 35,098 tonnes over the past three weeks.
 
Also, so called "social inventories" of zinc ingots in China - bonded stock levels in seven regions assessed by local data provider Shanghai Metal Market (SMM) - have surged by 78% over three weeks ahead of the Chinese New Year holiday.
 
Relatively low global stocks are balanced by lacklustre demand, with about half of zinc consumption from the construction sector, which was badly hit last year in China.
 
"Given the steel capacity cuts seen, we have reduced our forecasts for zinc demand for galvanised steel," Macquarie said in a note.
 
The bank expects the global zinc balance to flip to a surplus of 66,000 tonnes this year from a deficit of 321,000 tonnes in 2022.
 
Zinc inventories tumble on LME, bounce in Shanghaihttps://tmsnrt.rs/3IP0VjZ
 
Chinese Social Stocks of Zinc Rebound Ahead of Holidayhttps://tmsnrt.rs/3H92Aj3
 
Zinc Spread Eases Despite Sharp Fall in LME Inventorieshttps://tmsnrt.rs/3XjyD5B
 
(Reporting by Eric Onstad Editing by Tomasz Janowski)
 
 
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