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Callinex Mines Inc V.CNX

Alternate Symbol(s):  CLLXF

Callinex Mines Inc. is a Canada-based company, which is advancing its portfolio of base and precious metals rich deposits located in established Canadian mining jurisdictions. The Company's projects include Flin Flon Area - Pine Bay, Flin Flon Area - Flin Flon, Nash Creek and Superjack, Point Leamington, and others. It owns a 100% interest in the approximately 6,795 hectares Pine Bay project. At Pine Bay project, the Company is focused on the advancement of the high-grade Rainbow Deposit and Descendent Deposit. Its Nash Creek project is located in the volcanogenic massive sulfide (VMS) rich Bathurst Mining District of New Brunswick. Its 100% owned Point Leamington Deposit in Newfoundland is located in one of the richest VMS and Gold Districts in Canada. Its Flin Flon project covers approximately 2,455 hectares. Its other properties include Gossan Gold, Sneath Lake property, Moak Lake property, Herblet Lake property, Headway property, Headway North claim, and the Island Lake properties.


TSXV:CNX - Post by User

Post by Goodtoreadthis1on Oct 10, 2024 2:18am
131 Views
Post# 36260381

Is Port Lemington going to come back to life

Is Port Lemington going to come back to life

COLUMN-Zinc facing supply deficit as mine output falls again: Andy Home

By Andy Home, Reuters -  49 minutes agoInvestment News

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LONDON, Oct 9 (Reuters) - The global zinc market is facing a sizeable supply deficit in 2024 as a raw materials squeeze forces smelters to reduce production of refined metal.

The International Lead and Zinc Study Group (ILZSG) has significantly revised its assessment of zinc market dynamics since it last met in April.

A previously anticipated supply surplus of 56,000 metric tons has been updated to a 164,000-ton supply deficit.

Mine production is now expected to fall for a third consecutive year and smelter treatment terms, a good indicator of raw material availability, have turned negative.

China, which hosts the world's largest smelter network, is feeling the margin pinch and national production of refined zinc is sliding at an accelerating rate.

 

SUPPLY CRUNCH

Back in April ILZSG expected mine production to rise by 0.7% year-on-year in 2024. Just five months later, that forecast has been slashed with mined zinc output now on track to fall by 1.4% to 12.06 million tons, it said.

This will be the third straight year of sliding output with anticipated 2024 production 5.7% lower than 2021, the last year of the zinc mining boom.

Low zinc prices in 2023 took a heavy toll of higher-cost operators, particularly in Europe, where the suspension of the Tara mine in Ireland and Aljustrel in Portugal will cause regional production to slump by 11.4% this year.

The resulting squeeze on smelter margins has become more acute as the year has progressed. Spot treatment charges for Chinese imports of zinc concentrates fell into negative territory for the first time ever in August and have continued sliding.

Local data provider Shanghai Metal Market assesses the spot market at a negative $40 per ton, highlighting the mismatch between smelter demand and raw material availability.

China's refined metal output was dropping even before some of the country's top producers met in August to agree on curbing run-rates.

The pace of decline has accelerated in the last couple of months. SMM estimates zinc metal output was down by 7.6% year-on-year in August and expects the gap to have widened to 10.4% in September.

ILZSG forecasts full-year Chinese output to be 3.4% lower than 2023, contributing to a 1.8% drop in global production. It's a dramatic change from April, when the group expected refined output to rise by 0.6%.

The group's demand forecasts have been tweaked but not significantly changed. Usage is expected to grow by 1.8% this year with the rest of the world taking up the slack from China as the core growth driver.

Chinese demand will rise by just 0.7% in 2024, reflecting zinc's exposure to the country's struggling property sector. Galvanised steel, widely used in construction, is zinc's most important end-use sector, accounting for 60% of all demand, and China has been the world's most active builder over the last decade.

 

RECOVERY NEXT YEAR?

ILZSG expects this year's supply deficit to be followed by a healthy 148,000-ton surplus in 2025 due to higher zinc prices.

London Metal Exchange zinc has recovered a lot of ground since 2023, when it touched a three-year low of $2,215 per ton in May. Three-month metal hit a year-to-date high of $3,209 last week.

The improved price environment should encourage restarts. Swedish producer Boliden has already announced the reactivation of Tara in Ireland.

ILZSG expects global mined production to jump by 6.6% next year from this year's distressed levels due to a combination of restarts and the delayed ramp-up of the Ozernoye mine in Russia.

Better concentrates availability is expected to feed a 3.9% year-on-year recovery in global refined zinc production and a return to supply surplus.

However, that assumes both a speedy reactivation of mothballed operations and no major unforeseen disruptions.

Within days of ILZSG finalising its figures, Ivanhoe Mines ( IVPAF ) announced a major downgrade of expected production from its new Kipushi mine in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

This year's guidance has been cut from 100,000-140,000 tons to 50,000-70,000 tons of contained zinc due to a combination of operational teething problems and a lack of power.

As ILZSG's revisions since April clearly demonstrate, zinc's supply dynamics are in a state of high flux right now and are likely to remain that way for some time yet.

 

The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters.

(Reporting by Andy Home; editing by Jonathan Oatis)

 
 
 
 
CNX owns a giant Zinc depoit in Canada which may come back to life with this recent zinc shortage. 
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