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Sources say Trafigura has withdrawn zinc from LME storages and is preparing to ship some of it to the US.

Five sources with knowledge of the matter claim that Trafigura, a commodity trader, is shipping large quantities of zinc from Singapore to the United States. The zinc was stored in London Metal Exchange-approved warehouses.

Trafigura is yet to reveal how much zinc it has taken or will take from the LME warehouses located in Singapore or why they are taking the metal to the United States. Concerns about the LME market's supply have helped to push benchmark zinc prices up 5% this month, to $2,850 per metric ton, while the discount to the cash contract is now near zero. .

Sources in the industry said that Trafigura's zinc shipment to the United States was likely to be used by Nyrstar to meet its contractual obligations to U.S. clients when its Clarksville Smelter closes this year for maintenance.

Nyrstar responded to a comment request by saying that there will be an annual planned maintenance shutdown at Nyrstar Clarksville from mid-October through November.

Nyrstar confirmed Clarksville has a capacity of 125,000 metric tonnes of zinc metal per year. However, it declined to answer whether it would import metal to meet its customers' needs.

Trafigura has declined to comment.

Two sources claimed that Trafigura also used some of the zinc to "rent-deals", i.e. lucrative agreements whereby warehouses share their rental income with companies who deliver metals for as long it remains in storage.

Metal for Rent deals don't require the companies to own the metal. However, they do get a portion of the rent paid by the new owner as long as it remains in the warehouse. As of August 12, zinc stocks in LME storage facilities 0#MZNSTX–LOC> totalled 78.475 metric tonnes, of which 78.375 tons were stored in Singapore. Stocks of metals have dropped by over 30% since July 25,

Metal marked for delivery or cancelled warrants, which are title documents that confer ownership, show that another 33,000 tonnes is expected to leave LME's Singapore warehouses.

Two sources claimed Trafigura may be moving zinc from Europe to the U.S., in anticipation of tariffs being imposed on imports of zinc once the trade investigation started in April has been concluded. The investigation is similar to the copper probe, and covers a wide range of minerals, including zinc. In anticipation of tariffs, traders and producers shipped copper to the U.S. for most of the year.

The U.S. Geological Survey has defined zinc as a critical mineral. (Reporting and editing by Barbara Lewis, Lewis Jackson, and Pratima Deai)

(source: Reuters)