Platinum Production, Prices Struggling In Spite Of A Deficit

 | Nov 22, 2012 12:28AM ET

Could platinum be a story of short-term pain, long-term gain?

Platinum producers, resigned to the first, are no doubt hoping for the second.

Helped by the loss of some 200,000 ounces of production by Anglo Platinum alone, the South African production figures for this year are likely to hit an 11-year low, contributing to a global supply deficit of 400,000 ounces, according to Johnson Matthey as quoted in an FT article. Global mined platinum production stands at about 6 million ounces.

Yet in a market universally accepted to be in deficit, miners are still doing no more than breaking even.

Rising wages, weak PGM prices and high power costs have forced some producers like Lonmin, the third-largest producer, to make a rights issue after posting a $698 million pre-tax loss in the year up to September. Johnson Matthey has predicted prices will trade between $1,400 and $1,800 per ounce over the next six months, averaging $1,625.

Meanwhile, in a recent investors note Standard Bank suggested the metal will struggle to rise above $1,600 per ounce this year, but that in their opinion it made a good bet to buy at $1,500, supported in the longer term by the supply deficit and cost of production, in spite of poor demand growth from the automotive sector in the next 12 months.