Gloomy
economic outlook pushes copper to five-week low
LONDON
(Reuters) - Copper prices fell to a five-week low on Tuesday as fears that weak
global growth will reduce demand combined with news that a large smelter in
India could restart, lifting supply.
Investors
were gloomy after Chinese President Xi Jinping in a speech offered no measures
to boost the economy of the world's largest metals consumer, which recent data
has shown is slowing.
""Without
new stimulus measures, metals prices were likely to fall, said Deutsche Bank
analyst Nick Snowdon. "The overall picture (for China's economy) remains
one of deterioration," he said.
"
COPPER:
Benchmark copper on the London Metal Exchange (LME) was down 1.1 percent at
$6,057 a tonne at 1208 GMT after touching $6,032, the lowest since Nov. 14.
The
metal used in power and construction is down 16 percent this year, hit by
weaker Chinese growth and a U.S.-China trade dispute.
GLOBAL
MARKETS: World stocks also tumbled as worries over the global economy rippled
through markets ahead of an expected U.S. interest rate rise on Wednesday.
PESSIMISM:
Investor confidence in the global growth outlook is the lowest in a decade, a
Bank of America Merrill Lynch survey showed on Tuesday.
CHINA:
China's industrial output rose the least in nearly three years in November and
retail sales grew at their weakest pace since 2003, data last week showed.
YUAN:
Better news for metals, however, came from offshore yuan derivatives which
signal depreciation pressure on China's currency has eased. A weaker yuan makes
metals costlier for Chinese buyers and helps push prices lower.
INDIA
SMELTER: An Indian court ruling on Monday moved a 400,000 tonne-a-year copper
smelter operated by Vedanta Ltd closer to being allowed to restart.
SPREAD:
In a signal that supply tightness was easing, cash copper flipped from a
premium to a $32.50 discount against the three month contract.
STOCKS:
However, copper inventories in LME-registered warehouses at 122,000 tonnes
remain near the lowest since 2008.
NICKEL:
The global nickel market deficit widened to 19,600 tonnes in October, the
International Nickel Study Group (INSG) said.
PHILIPPINES:
A Philippine government panel overseeing operations at the country's 41 mines
has deferred a recommendation to lift a six-year-old moratorium on new mining
projects.
OTHER
METALS: LME aluminium was up 0.1 percent at $1,944 a tonne, zinc was 0.5
percent lower at $2,526.50, nickel had lost 0.5 percent to $10,935, lead gained
0.5 percent to $1,941 and tin was down 0.7 percent at $19,220.
Happy Investing
Source:Yahoofinance.com
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