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BLBG: Lead Falls as Ivernia Gets Approval on Shipment; Copper Drops
 
By Claudia Carpenter

Dec. 3 (Bloomberg) -- Lead dropped for a seventh day in London after Ivernia Inc., the former supplier of 3 percent of world output, was cleared to resume a shipment from Australia.

Ivernia will start removing 8,000 metric tons of stockpiled lead concentrate next month after Western Australia Premier Colin Barnett announced the approval, Toronto-based Ivernia said today. Lead inventories in warehouses monitored by the London Metal Exchange have dropped 5.5 percent this year as Ivernia was barred from shipping metal since last year.

“If the material is converted to refined metal and put on warrant, yes it would turn the tide for lead and lead inventories would be increasing,” said Nick Moore, a commodity strategist at RBS Global Banking & Markets in London.

Lead for delivery in three months fell $40, or 3.7 percent, to $1,049 a ton as of 10:10 a.m. in London, the lowest since July 2006.

Ivernia’s exports were barred in March 2007 following an investigation into poisoning at Australia’s port of Esperance. Once the 8,000 tons is removed, Ivernia will work with the government on an area “clean up,” Ivernia’s director of investor relations Ann Candelario said in a phone interview from Toronto yesterday. The next priority would be to move 21,000 tons of stockpiled lead from the port of Fremantle, she said.

The metal, mostly used in car batteries, has dropped 58 percent this year because of reduced automobile production. U.S. industry sales dropped for a 13th straight month in November, the longest slide in 17 years.

‘Worst Month’

“December is probably going to be the worst month for a whole series” of economic reports for manufacturing, Moore said. “You have Christmas and New Year’s closures, and certain manufacturers have announced extending those.”

A typical car battery contains 7.5 kilograms (16.5 pounds) of the metal, according to the International Zinc and Lead Study Group.

Lead inventories in warehouses monitored by the London bourse increased 1,125 tons, or 2.7 percent, to 42,975 tons, the biggest jump since June 17.

Aluminum dropped as much as $25, or 1.5 percent, to $1,675 a ton, a four-year low, after stockpiles of the metal gained to the highest since Nov. 29, 1994. Inventories rose 12,750 tons to 1.83 million tons, the LME said today. It last traded at $1,681 a ton.

Copper dropped $64 to $3,491 a ton. LME stockpiles fell 250 tons to 292,775 tons.

Zinc declined $16 to $1,153, nickel dropped $10 to $9,495 a ton and tin fell $55 to $11,900 a ton.

To contact the reporter on this story: Claudia Carpenter in London at ccarpenter2@bloomberg.net or ccarpenter2@bloomberg.net

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