Business World

Copper and nickel buoyed by electric vehicle demand hopes, strong economy

-

LONDON — Nickel and copper rose on Monday, boosted by expectatio­ns of healthy demand from the electric vehicle sector, a pollution crackdown in China and signs of solid global economic growth.

Participan­ts at the London Metal Exchange ( LME) Week industry gathering in London last week were bullish about the sector’s prospects, especially because of anticipate­d growth in demand for electric vehicles, which depend heavily on nickel and copper.

“Markets like a good story whether it’s electric vehicles, China’s ‘ One Belt, One Road’ ( economic initiative) or even India ( growth) but we’re going to struggle to make new ground from here,” Societe Generale analyst Robin Bhar said.

“A stronger dollar may provide headwind through to the end of the year, but we should stay wellsuppor­ted at these levels.”

LME nickel ended up 1.50% at $ 12,920 a ton, having gained nearly 10% last week to hit a high above $ 13,000, its loftiest level since June 2015.

Goldman Sachs upgraded its nickel forecasts, pushing its three- month nickel view to $ 12,500 a ton from $ 9,000, but said prices were more likely to find nearby support from China’s pollution crackdown given electric vehicle demand is a story for 2020 onwards.

“We expect nickel prices to remain high over the next couple of months on a supportive macroecono­mic backdrop and market tightening driven by Chinese nickel pig iron (NPI) cuts,” it said in a report. NPI is a low- grade composite of nickel.

Chinese iron ore futures climbed more than six percent, tracking firmer steel prices after China’s top steel province surpassed its capacity reduction targets as Beijing ’s pollution crackdown heats up.

Copper closed up 1.10% at $ 6,970, paring losses from the previous session. Copper prices have climbed seven percent this quarter and are eyeing a sixth straight quarter of growth.

The dollar was little changed, lessening some headwinds for metals after surging on bets that the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates again next month and tighten further into 2018 as US economic growth remains firm.

Among other base metals, aluminum ended down 0.60% at $2,171 a ton, zinc closed up 0.40% at $3,232, lead closed up 1.90% at $2,510 having earlier hit a near two-week high, while tin ended down 0.50% at $19,450. —

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines