LME wanted more lead stocks. It certainly got them: Andy Home
XLB•Warehouse roulette drives stock churn
LME lead stocks have featured large, concentrated bursts of warranting action for many months.
The underlying trade is more about warehousing arbitrage than lead market fundamentals.
A trader, in this case reportedly Trafigura, places a large amount of metal onto LME warrant, agreeing with the warehouse operator to split future rental fees paid by the new owner.
The new owner will likely waste little time cancelling the warrants to escape the rental deal and moving the metal to another warehousing company.
The resulting stock churn was once a defining feature of the LME aluminium market, but inventory of the light metal has dwindled to under 400,000 tons, including off-warrant stocks.
The game has shifted to lead.




