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LME storage facilities see large deliveries of lead for profitable lease offers

Big quantities of lead were delivered to London Metal Exchange (LME) approved storage facilities in Singapore on Monday for profitable financial offers, taking overall stocks of the battery metal to their greatest since early May.

Market sources say the lead deliveries are likely to be for so-called lease deals where LME-approved storage facilities share charges with banks and commodity traders that provide metal to them.

Business that provide metal for lease deals do not have to retain ownership of the metal, however can get a share of the lease, paid by the brand-new owners, for as long as the metal remains in that storage facility.

Lead inventories jumped 44,475 metric heaps on Monday to 253,550 lots << MPBSTX-TOTAL >, up 40% since June 4, daily LME information revealed on Tuesday. A breakdown revealed 45,725 lots were provided to LME warehouses in Singapore and 1,250 lots were removed.

Lease for metal on LME warrant, a title document conferring ownership, is typically five time higher than metal in storage that is not deliverable to LME warehouses.

LME warehouse daily rents average around 51 U.S. cents a. load, which for 45,725 loads would amount to more than $23,000 a. day.

These deals are possible because business have the ability to purchase. less expensive nearby lead contracts and sell greater priced contracts. even more along the maturity curve.

The discount for the money against the three-month lead. agreement << CMPB0-3 > climbed up above $60 a lot on July 11, the. highest because early June. It was last around $42 a load.

(source: Reuters)