Latest News

Copper bulls are challenged by weak demand and higher inventories

Copper bulls are challenged by weak demand and higher inventories
Copper bulls are challenged by weak demand and higher inventories

The dollar fell on Monday, and copper prices rose. However, weak demand prospects in China, the top industrial metal consumer, along with rising inventories, are expected to challenge the bullish sentiment.

The benchmark copper price on the London Metal Exchange was 0.4% higher, at $13,043 per metric ton. Prices have fallen 10% since January 29, when they reached a record high of $14527.50.

Funds use numerical models that generate buy and sale signals to determine the effect of a softer U.S. dollar on metals priced in dollars.

The market is still dominated, according to traders, by funds and other speculators as in the recent weeks. The traders expect volume to decline as the economic activity in China stalls due to its Lunar New Year holiday.

In a recent note, Britannia Global Markets analysts said that "recent price increases appear increasingly disconnected from industrial fundamentals. This is particularly true as evidence of a slowing real world demand becomes more evident."

"In China copper buyers have extended Lunar New Year shut downs while fabricators reduced spot purchases due to margin pressure and high inventories."

Copper stocks at LME-approved warehouses are 184,300 The Shanghai Futures Exchange monitors warehouses that are monitored by the Shanghai Futures Exchange. At 248,911, the number of people has increased by more than 60% since December 19.

Yangshan copper premium highlights the expectation of a weak Chinese demand It is a measure of China's appetite to import copper. The price has gone up from $20 per ton in January to $37 per ton. However, it is still far too low to indicate a strong demand.

This week, the spotlight will be on the employment and consumer prices data coming from the United States. These could have an impact on the direction that the U.S. dollar and interest rates take.

Other metals saw aluminium gain 0.7%, to $3,107.5 per ton. Zinc was flat at $3.346, while lead fell 0.4%, to $1.953. Tin rose 4%, to $48,600, and nickel gained 0.9%, to $17.250.

(source: Reuters)