This were made by Credit Suisse, it said the nickel price will rise 20%!
  the other foreign said (ML and Citigroup), the price of Nickel will drop, 
  Foreign view versus foreign view
  so...who will be the winner? 
  or your mind just being played? decision is yours...
   
   
  Nickel May Rise 20% on Smelter Shortage, Credit Suisse Says 

  By Madelene Pearson
   
  May 21 (Bloomberg) -- The price for nickel, used to make stainless steel, may 
rise 20 percent as a shortage of smelters to process ore into metal constrains 
supply, Credit Suisse Group said in a report. 
  Nickel may reach $65,000 a metric ton in the ``near term,'' Credit Suisse 
London-based analysts led by Jeremy Gray and Eily Ong said in a report dated 
May 16. Smelting output may grow at 4.6 percent this year compared with demand 
growth as high as 5 percent should stainless steelmakers rebuild inventories 
and global economic growth increase, the report said. 
  Nickel for immediate delivery rose to a record $54,050 a metric ton in London 
on May 15 as China's economic growth fueled demand for the metal. Cost overruns 
and delays at BHP Billiton Ltd.'s Ravensthorpe and Cia. Vale do Rio Doce's Goro 
projects, the two largest nickel mines under construction, exacerbated supply 
shortfalls, helping drive price increases. 
  ``Prices will remain strong over the next two years given the lack of supply 
growth until 2009 at the earliest,'' Gray and Ong wrote in the report. ``The 
current profile of new smelters is unlikely to be enough to feed ongoing strong 
demand from the stainless steel industry in the next two years.'' 
  Nickel for immediate delivery rose $1,800, or 3.5 percent, to $54,025 a ton 
on May 18. Prices have jumped 155 percent in the past year as inventories 
plunged 78 percent to an amount equal to less than two days of global 
consumption. 
  Only three of 11 nickel mine and smelter projects under way, including 
Ravensthorpe and Goro, will start production before 2010, the analysts said. 
   
  Risk of Delay 
   
  ``Any delay in the 2008 startup of Ravensthorpe and the 2009 startup of Goro 
will clearly make our global smelter growth forecasts of 4.6 percent in 2007 
and 5.3 percent growth in 2008 look too aggressive and would help underpin the 
current strength in nickel prices,'' the report said. 
  The forecast by Credit Suisse compares to the $55,000 a ton estimate of 
Standard Bank analyst Michael Skinner made April 26. 
  Prices are expected to stay ``strong'' over the next two years given the lack 
of smelter supply growth until 2009, the report said. They may also gain should 
an anticipated increase in production of lower grade ferro nickel from China be 
overestimated, the analysts wrote. 
  ``The strength in today's nickel price is a good lead indicator to suggest 
that the ramp up of Chinese production is clearly taking longer than expected 
to make an impact,'' they said. ``Our suspicion is that the ramp up of Chinese 
production will not make a significant dent in global supply until 2009 at the 
earliest.'' 
  The bank is assuming demand growth of 3 percent this year, rising to 5 
percent should stainless steelmakers build inventories in the third quarter. A 
``pronounced'' cutback to stainless steel production may damp demand for nickel 
and threaten prices, Credit Suisse wrote. 
  To contact the reporter on this story: Madelene Pearson in Melbourne on 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
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