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Nickel is the leading base metal on the market due to uncertainty about Indonesian output

Nickel is the leading base metal on the market due to uncertainty about Indonesian output
Nickel is the leading base metal on the market due to uncertainty about Indonesian output

Nickel fell sharply on Thursday, ending a rally that began in December. The Indonesian government refused to disclose its mining output quota for 2026, causing concern about a "rollback" of supply restrictions.

The most active nickel contract at the 'Shanghai Futures Exchange' closed daytime trade down 6.14% to 136,440 Yuan ($19.538.32) per metric ton after plummeting as high as 7.96% from 133,800 Yuan.

As of 0700 GMT the benchmark three-month Nickel on the London Metal Exchange dropped 4.05%, to $17.170 per ton after a dive of 5.92% to $16,835.

The steep decline has halted an upward trend of more than 30% since December. This was fueled by the Indonesian Government's plan to reduce 2026 mining production quotas (locally known as RKAB) to support prices.

Energy and Mineral Resources minister Bahlil lahadalia gave a press conference?on Thursday. He reiterated that the government plans to reduce nickel quotas. The quotas would?be adjusted according to the demand of local smelters.

Investors are sceptical of the Indonesian government’s policy. They worry that the government might eventually reverse the quota-reduction, and dismiss the rally.

Stocks in London Metal Exchange registered warehouses LME data showed that there was ample supply. A 20,088-ton influx boosted inventories to the highest level seen since June 2018.

Analysts said that the overall base metals complex has a softer tone due to profit booking after broad gains.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange's most traded copper contract closed at 101,220 Yuan per ton after falling as low as 100,040 Yuan.

The benchmark copper for three months on the London Metal Exchange fell 0.62% to $12,820 per ton.

The copper price remained elevated despite profit booking ease. This was due to supply concerns amid mine disruptions, and regional dislocation amid United States Tariff worries.

Other base metals in the SHFE fell by 2.89% for aluminum, 1.36% for zinc, 2.01% for lead and 1.83%, respectively.

The LME's other metals saw a decline of 0.57% in aluminium, 1.36% in lead, and 0.39% for tin. Zinc was the only gainer with a 0.08% increase. $1 = 6.9832 Chinese Yuan Renminbi (Reporting and editing by Lewis Jackson, Dylan Duan)

(source: Reuters)