Latest News

Nickel has its best month since 2 years, as copper climbs in China

The copper price rose on Thursday, and was poised to 'crack a five-day decline after positive factory data from China. Nickel prices were 'heading towards their biggest monthly jump in two years due to tighter supply coming out of Indonesia.

In official open outcry, the benchmark three-month copper price on London Metal Exchange rose 0.6% to $13,085 per metric tonne.

Metal used in construction, manufacturing and power was expected to rise by 6% in April. This would be the best month in?2026, based on the hope that the Middle East conflict will be contained.

A private survey revealed that China's manufacturing sector expanded in April at the fastest rate since the end 2020, thanks to booming?new orders. Copper stocks on the Shanghai Futures Exchange also rose. Continue to be drawn down as 192,025 tonnes fell 4.6% from last week.

The SHFE will be closed on Friday for the Labour Day holiday. It won't reopen again until May 6th.

The CRU analyst Craig Lang stated on a webinar that the demand for refined copper in China will grow by 2,8% this year due to ongoing grid investments and tighter scrap supply.

Lang stated that fund investments have been driving the recent high copper price. Global exchange stocks are at their highest level since early 2000s. Lang said that he believes copper prices will fall to $11,000 by the end of the year, and then recover?over a medium-term.

ING stated in a report that additional price support comes from supply-side 'risks' to raw materials sulphur.

Nickel was 1% higher at $19 465 per ton, and is on track to gain 13.9% in this month, its largest monthly increase since April 2024, due to tighter mine production limits in Indonesia. Smelters there are also feeling the squeeze of sulphur.

Sucden Financial stated that "levels approaching $20,000/t?increase the probability of additional supply?being approved?or reactivated?"

Lead edged up 0.3% to $1,943.50, while tin rose 1.9% to $48,700. Aluminium fell 0.2% to $3480. (Reporting and editing by Harikrishnan Nair, Sonia Cheema and Harikrishnan Nair; Additional reporting by Amy Lv, Lewis Jackson and Amy Lv)

(source: Reuters)