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LME suspends temporarily lending rules for cobalt contracts

LME suspends temporarily lending rules for cobalt contracts

After tracking the movement of stocks, the London Metal Exchange (LME), announced on Thursday that it had temporarily suspended certain lending obligations for parties who held large quantities of cobalt inventories under its contract.

When one party is in a dominant position on the exchange, lending rules are triggered. This forces that party to lend material to other investors.

In a press release, the LME announced that it had canceled its requirement for parties with cobalt positions equaling 90% or more available inventories to borrow at a standard premium.

The document added that the measure was designed to make sure participants were not discouraged from holding live warrants, or delivering additional metal due to low stock levels.

A warrant is an official document that shows ownership of the inventories at LME warehouses.

The world's largest and oldest market for industrial metals has said that the temporary measures are only temporary.

LME data does not currently show a position where 90% of inventories are cobalt or a dramatic fall in inventories. However, the data is delayed.

Data shows that two parties have a significant short and long position in futures, which is equivalent to over 40% of the open interest.

Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing Ltd. is the owner of LME.

(source: Reuters)