Zinc Monthly Price - Pakistan Rupee per Metric Ton

Data as of March 2026

Range
Apr 2016 - Jan 2019: 162,319.200 (83.51%)
Chart

Description: Zinc (LME), high grade, minimum 99.95% purity, settlement price beginning April 1990; previously special high grade, minimum 99.995%, cash prices

Unit: Pakistan Rupee per Metric Ton



Source: Platts Metals Week, Engineering and Mining Journal; Thomson Reuters Datastream; World Bank.

See also: Mineral production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

See also: Commodities glossary - Definitions of terms used in commodity trading

Overview

Zinc is a base metal used primarily to protect steel from corrosion and, to a lesser extent, in alloys and chemical applications. On commodity markets, it is commonly priced as high-grade zinc on the London Metal Exchange (LME), quoted in U.S. dollars per metric ton. The LME benchmark reflects deliverable metal meeting exchange specifications and serves as a reference for physical trade, hedging, and industrial contracting. Zinc is traded in metric tons, with market participants often discussing refined metal rather than ore or concentrate.

Its most important use is galvanizing, where a thin zinc coating is applied to steel to slow rusting. This makes zinc closely tied to construction, infrastructure, transportation equipment, and fabricated metal products. Zinc is also used in brass and other alloys, die-casting, and a range of chemical products such as zinc oxide. Because its main function is protective rather than decorative, demand is linked to the stock of steel in use and to maintenance and replacement cycles across industrial economies.

Supply Drivers

Zinc supply depends on both mining and smelting, with ore typically produced as a byproduct of polymetallic deposits that also contain lead, copper, silver, or gold. Major mining regions include China, Australia, Peru, India, Mexico, and parts of Europe, where geology has long supported large sulfide deposits. Because zinc is often recovered from complex ores, output depends not only on zinc grades but also on the economics of associated metals and on the availability of concentrator and smelter capacity.

Production is constrained by the mining cycle, which includes exploration, permitting, shaft development, and mill construction, all of which create long lead times. Ore grades decline over time at mature mines, and replacement requires sustained investment. Weather, power availability, water access, and transport infrastructure matter because many mines are located in remote regions. Smelting is energy-intensive and sensitive to electricity and fuel costs, while environmental controls affect operating costs and plant utilization. Concentrate treatment charges and refining charges also influence the balance between mine output and smelter demand for feedstock.

Demand Drivers

Zinc demand is dominated by galvanizing, so it is closely linked to steel consumption in construction, machinery, appliances, vehicles, and infrastructure maintenance. Because galvanized steel is used to extend service life, zinc demand reflects both new steel fabrication and replacement of corroded assets. This creates a structural link to industrial activity, urbanization, and the long-lived capital stock rather than to short-lived consumer spending alone.

Substitution is limited in many applications because zinc offers a cost-effective corrosion barrier, though aluminum, stainless steel, coatings, and plastics can replace it in some uses. In die-casting and brass production, zinc competes with aluminum and copper depending on strength, weight, and fabrication requirements. Demand also includes zinc oxide for rubber, ceramics, paints, and chemicals, which ties the metal to industrial production and manufacturing supply chains. Seasonal patterns can appear in construction and infrastructure work, but the broader demand base is shaped by durable goods production and maintenance cycles. In many economies, zinc use rises with industrialization because galvanizing is a standard method for protecting steel assets.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Zinc prices are sensitive to global industrial activity because the metal is used in manufacturing and construction rather than in purely financial applications. A stronger U.S. dollar often weighs on dollar-denominated metal prices by making them more expensive for non-U.S. buyers, while a weaker dollar tends to support them. Interest rates matter through inventory financing and the cost of holding metal in storage, which affects the shape of the forward curve. When nearby supply is tight relative to warehouse stocks, the market can move into backwardation; when inventories are ample, contango is more common.

Zinc also responds to broader commodity sentiment and to expectations for industrial output, freight, and energy costs. Because smelting is energy-intensive, power prices can influence margins and supply behavior. The metal is not a classic monetary hedge like gold, but it can still be affected by inflation expectations through their impact on input costs, financing, and industrial demand.

MonthPriceChange
Apr 2016194,369.20-
May 2016195,814.900.74%
Jun 2016212,105.208.32%
Jul 2016228,921.007.93%
Aug 2016238,711.404.28%
Sep 2016239,910.700.50%
Oct 2016242,085.800.91%
Nov 2016268,964.0011.10%
Dec 2016279,374.303.87%
Jan 2017284,654.701.89%
Feb 2017298,311.404.80%
Mar 2017291,169.50-2.39%
Apr 2017274,187.40-5.83%
May 2017271,587.30-0.95%
Jun 2017269,897.80-0.62%
Jul 2017294,381.009.07%
Aug 2017314,158.606.72%
Sep 2017328,554.204.58%
Oct 2017344,178.704.76%
Nov 2017340,522.80-1.06%
Dec 2017348,554.602.36%
Jan 2018380,461.909.15%
Feb 2018390,598.502.66%
Mar 2018366,607.80-6.14%
Apr 2018368,551.200.53%
May 2018353,766.80-4.01%
Jun 2018368,838.704.26%
Jul 2018332,123.80-9.95%
Aug 2018311,687.20-6.15%
Sep 2018302,505.50-2.95%
Oct 2018350,748.7015.95%
Nov 2018347,568.00-0.91%
Dec 2018362,901.104.41%
Jan 2019356,688.40-1.71%

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Nyrstar
Website: http://www.nyrstar.com/
Location: London, UK

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