Palladium jumps above $2 000 amid optimism over China reopening

Palladium jumped by the most since March amid renewed optimism about China’s economy reopening and planned stimulus for automakers, the biggest consumers of the metal.

Palladium held above $2 000 an ounce, after gaining 6.7{e93887a69cdd95d753f466db084bbc3aa0067124675315461d28d68a72842cc2} as of 2:06 p.m. in London. It has dropped about a third since hitting a record in late February as the coronavirus pandemic dented automaker demand for the metal used in pollution control devices.

Sister metal platinum also advanced amid concerns over supplies from South Africa, the biggest producer. Impala Platinum temporarily shuttered one of its mines after several workers tested positive for the virus. The market for platinum-group metals will remain tight this year as both demand and supply are hit by the pandemic, autocatalyst maker Johnson Matthey said on Monday.

While platinum remains the worst performer among precious metals this year, exchange-traded funds backed by the metal saw the first net weekly inflow since February, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Net bullish platinum bets ticked up to the highest in six weeks, weekly CFTC data on futures and options show.

Key drivers:

  • The World Platinum Investment Council said Monday a surplus in the global platinum market is expected lower than feared.
  • Platinum is enjoying the tailwind as investors look for relative value, according to Ole Hansen, head of commodity strategy at Saxo Bank A/S. “That has attracted renewed fund demand,” he said.
  • There’s “good” demand from China for both platinum and palladium, while supplies are capped, said Afshin Nabavi, head of trading at refiner MKS PAMP Group in Switzerland.
  • Autocatalyst maker Johnson Matthey Plc noted that a push by carmakers to cost cuts might result in substitution of some palladium with platinum.
  • France plans to announce a stimulus plan for the auto sector in the next two weeks.
  • Sibanye Stillwater Ltd. has identified two workers with virus infections at its platinum mines during the past days, yet the cases haven’t affected operations, its spokesman said.

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