Tin Retreats from Record High
2026-06-09 10:18
By
Andre Joaquim
1 min. read
Tin futures in the UK fell to $52,300 per tonne from the record high of $59,000 on June 2nd, tracking other base metals as a stronger dollar and higher interest rates momentarily offset the impact of tight supply and soaring AI demand.
The greenback strengthened after a strong US jobs report, driving yields to rise globally and pressure the outlook for manufacturers in the short term.
Still, futures remained 26% higher year-to-date.
Major producer Indonesia doubled down on threats against the illegal mining of tin and seized 500 tonnes of metal from mines without licences.
The move consolidated the pledge from Jakarta that it would crack down on mining activity that lack licensing after President Subianto ordered the closure of 1,000 illegal mines in Sumatra, tightening the outlook on supply from the key exporter.
Meanwhile, tin's usage in datacenters drove industry players to signal that the metal's demand for AI servers will triple by 2030, aligned with soaring demand in Asia.