Palladium hits 17-year high

Published December 23, 2017
Ingots of 99.98 per cent pure palladium are seen on a table.—Reuters
Ingots of 99.98 per cent pure palladium are seen on a table.—Reuters

LONDON: Palladium prices jumped to 17-year highs on Friday as strong demand from autocatalyst makers reinforced the prospects of market shortages, but slowing car sales are expected to challenge further gains.

Spot palladium was trading up 0.1 per cent at $1,038.5 an ounce at 1440 GMT from an earlier $1,042.50, its highest since February 2001. Analysts think about 80pc of global palladium demand, estimated at more than 10 million ounces next year, will come from autocatalysts for gasoline powered cars, which many now prefer over diesel fuelled vehicles. Pall­adium prices have doubled since January 2016 after Germ­any’s Volkswagen in Sept 2015 admitted it had used illegal software to cheat US diesel emissions tests.

“Diesel’s share of the European auto market is falling and the flip side of that is gasoline’s share is rising,” said Julius Baer analyst Carsten Menke. “Chinese car sales supported palladium, but there will a reality check as tax incentives are removed. In Europe and the United States car sales look to be peaking.”

China’s vehicle sales in the first 11 months of this year totalled 25.8 million units, up 3.6 per cent from the same period in 2016, data from a local association showed. “Next year is set to be the seventh successive year of large deficits in the palladium market,” GFMS analysts said in a recent research note. “We expect another deficit next year in excess of 1.5 million ounces and unlike in 2015 and 2016, and to a much lesser extent this year, we think this will stop being accommodated for by sales from ETF holders.”

Shortages have in recent years been partly offset by investors selling their holdings in physically backed exchange-traded funds.

Published in Dawn, December 23rd, 2017

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