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LME's new Hong Kong storage facilities attract copper deliveries

Daily LME data revealed that the London Metal Exchange’s new warehouses located in Hong Kong had attracted 100 tons of copper. The copper was stored without a warrant or title documents confirming ownership. This location is expected to be operational in mid-July. Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing's LME approved Hong Kong in January for warehouse delivery as the LME sees Hong Kong as an entry point to China, the world's largest metals consumer.

The LME stated that "the arrival of metal into LME-approved storage facilities shows that listing Hong Kong as an option for delivery is attractive to metal market participants."

From July 15, owners of metal will be able to place the metal on warrant and deliver it against LME contracts. The exchange, which is the oldest and largest industrial metals market in the world, has added.

Sources at a LME registered warehousing company said that some additional copper was expected to arrive in Hong Kong's LME registered warehouses before July 15. However, the amounts would be small. Hong Kong's high warehouse costs had previously raised concerns about the viability and cost of the new storage facility compared to other Asian sites like South Korea or Malaysia.

As of July 2, according to LME data there were 11,356 tonnes of copper in Asia in registered LME warehouses, mostly in South Korea.

The market will monitor any inflows into the LME registered warehouses closely due to the tightness that has accumulated in the copper markets after the massive outflows in the U.S. early this year. The LME's copper stock is down 64% from mid-February to 97,400 tonnes, but they are up a little bit in July. This has helped reduce the premium for contracts with shorter maturities compared to those that have longer maturities. Reporting by Polina Devlin; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama

(source: Reuters)