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Current high prices have significantly dampened trading activity in the spot market. Downstream enterprises had followed up when prices were at a phased low last week, but most have now shifted to a wait-and-see stance. Although there is traditionally some restocking demand after New Year's Day and before the Chinese New Year, high-priced raw materials and downstream funding pressures are currently in a stalemate, with orders mainly coming in small follow-up amounts. Some enterprises may slow down their pre-holiday production pace ahead of schedule and adopt a cautious wait-and-see approach. Although the spot market premium has narrowed, it still reflects a situation of "nominal prices without actual transactions." From a risk perspective, potential supply-side recovery could exert pressure on prices, requiring continuous monitoring of production resumptions at mines in Myanmar and developments in Indonesia's export policies.
On the macro front, if expectations for US Fed interest rate cuts are delayed, pushing the US dollar stronger, it could suppress prices of dollar-denominated nonferrous metals. At the same time, after consecutive rapid gains, prices have accumulated some profit-taking pressure, and risks of a technical pullback are gradually building.
Overall, although low inventory and event-driven factors have jointly pushed tin prices to rise sharply in the short term, high prices' suppression of actual demand, the possibility of supply recovery, and uncertainty in macro sentiment together constitute potential downside risks for the market. Going forward, close attention should be paid to multiple factors, including geopolitical developments, substantive changes in fundamentals, and shifts in capital sentiment.
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