Latest News

Shanghai copper continues to gain on fears of supply shortages

Shanghai copper continued to rise on Friday as investors bet that supply shortages will continue despite ongoing disruptions in mines.

As of 0330 GMT, the most active copper contract at Shanghai Futures Exchange had risen 0.24%, to 86250 yuan (12,106.28 dollars) per metric tonne. The week was expected to end with a 3.57% increase, due to China's National Day holidays from October 1-8.

The Shanghai contract moved followed the benchmark three-month Copper on the London Metal Exchange which reached $11,000 per ton on Friday, close to the all-time record of $11,104.5 in May 2024.

The London future dropped below the $11,000 mark, falling 0.89%, to $10,770.5 per ton. It hopes to finish the week with a 0.51% increase.

Data from Cochilco (the country's copper commissioner) showed that the copper output of Chilean state-run mining company Codelco fell 25% in August. This was after a deadly mine collapse halted production at its most profitable mine.

Codelco has been working on accelerating recovery since September. However, the data shows that supply shortages are increasing after Freeport declared force majeure for its Grasberg Mine in Indonesia.

Analysts at Chinese broker Maike Futures stated that the market was now dominated by bulls. They noted that a drop in China's domestic refined copper output also contributed to this bullish sentiment.

Other base metals in the SHFE index, such as aluminium, rose by 0.07%. Zinc gained 0.45%. Nickel added 0.34%. Lead increased 0.29%. Tin rose by 0.59%.

London Futures, on the other hand, mostly reversed a rally that was led by copper. Aluminium fell 1%, Nickel shed 0.92% and Tin dropped 1.46%. Lead also declined 0.12%. Zinc, the only metal to gain ground, rose by 0.22%.

Analysts at London-based broker Sucden Financial say that base metals are advancing in a fragile rally driven by momentum, rather than real improvements in fundamentals. They also said the rally depends on traders breaking through resistance levels. Reporting by Dylan Duan, Lewis Jackson and Sumana Nandy; Editing by Sumana Niandy.

(source: Reuters)