Latest News

Copper remains firm as US-Iran conflict weighs on sentiment

The dollar was weaker on Monday, but gains were limited as tensions between the U.S.A. and Iran escalated and oil prices increased, further causing inflationary fears.

The benchmark copper price on the London Metal Exchange was 0.1% higher, at $13,501 per metric ton of official rings.

The lower dollar makes metals priced in dollars cheaper for holders of currencies other than the U.S. dollar, which could increase demand.

After renewed military strikes by the United States and Iran, concerns about energy shipments via the Strait of Hormuz were reignited.

The focus was also on falling copper inventories. The copper stocks in LME approved warehouses fell by more than 20 percent since the end of May, to a 4-month low level of 305 200 tons.

Metal earmarked for deliveries at 43% or cancelled warrants indicate that another 130,525 tonnes is expected to leave the LME.

Sources in the industry say that much of the copper is headed to the United States, where President Donald Trump may impose tariffs on metals used in construction and power industries.

Since President Donald Trump launched a national-security probe in February last year, traders and producers have shipped metals to the United States.

Since then, the copper stocks in warehouses that were registered with Comex have increased by nearly 600%.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange monitors warehouses and has found that copper stocks have dropped by 80% in the last few months.

As material leaves warehouses, the rapid fall in stocks creates a higher floor price. This trend is seen across most metals.

The markets are anticipating Kevin Warsh's first appearance as Federal Reserve Chair before the?Congress and?U.S. Inflation data can provide clues about the direction of the dollar.

Lead fell 1.2% to $1.874, zinc declined 1.5% to $3.563, aluminium rose 0.2% at $3.145, tin increased by 0.1% to $53,200, and nickel dropped 1% to $15,575.

(source: Reuters)