Latest News

Copper reaches two-week high as a knee-jerk response to the weaker dollar

Copper reaches two-week high as a knee-jerk response to the weaker dollar

The dollar fell on Tuesday as U.S. President Donald Trump announced he was removing Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook. This announcement raised expectations for interest rate reductions in the U.S. next month.

The dollar price of metals is cheaper for holders other currencies. This drives up demand and prices.

The traders, however, said that the price of copper had fallen since the initial kneejerk reaction because the dollar was stable and Chinese companies were selling. Trump wrote in a note that he had fired Cook for alleged irregularities in the mortgage loan process. Analysts claim that this has heightened investor concerns about the independence and stability of the U.S. Central Bank. The benchmark copper price on the London Metal Exchange was flat at $9.796 per metric ton, up from $9.862 earlier, the highest level since August 13. The disruption in supply in Chile was a major factor in the rise of copper. In Chile, Sernageomin, the mining regulator, has placed additional demands on Codelco to resume operations in affected areas after a fatal collapse at their El Teniente Copper Mine.

Codelco has reduced its copper forecasts for the year due to the incident.

The initial support for the copper price is the 50-day average of $9,754 and the 21-day average of $9,731.

Traders expect the price of zinc to be supported elsewhere by falling inventories at LME-approved storage facilities, which have fallen 66% in just six months, from 65,525 to 65,525 . Metal earmarked for shipment or cancelled warrants indicate that another 23,725 tonnes are expected to leave the LME.

The discount on the three-month cash zinc contract has been reduced due to concerns about the supply of zinc on the LME. Around $4 per ton, down from levels of over $40 in April.

Lead was unchanged at $1.994.5. Tin rose 0.3% at $33,925. Nickel gained 0.3% at $15,140.

Surveys of purchasing managers within China's manufacturing sector will provide valuable insight into the future demand for industrial metals in China. (Reporting and editing by Shreya biswas and Barbara Lewis; reporting by Pratima desai)

(source: Reuters)