Business World

Metals ride escalating trade war; consumers lock in

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LONDON — Industrial metals tumbled on Wednesday, with copper, zinc and lead sinking to the lowest in about a year as speculator­s unleashed selling on the back of a further escalation in the USChinese trade conflict.

Prices bounced off their lows, however, as some consumers scrambled to lock in prices they regarded as good value after heavy recent losses.

“Shanghai ( Futures Exchange) is down even more aggressive­ly today. It seems pretty clear that’s where the momentum initiated, but it’s been pretty broad across the board,” said Oliver Nugent, commoditie­s strategist at ING Bank in Amsterdam.

“I think we’re seeing a decent amount of consumer interest at these levels. Our view is that there’s a good chance that a ( trade) deal could be sought, particular­ly after the November midterms ( US elections),” Mr. Nugent added.

“If you are of that conviction, this could represent a substantia­l dip-buying opportunit­y.”

China accused the US of bullying and warned it would hit back after the Mr. Trump administra­tion raised the stakes in their trade dispute, threatenin­g 10% tariffs on $200 billion of Chinese goods.

Metals fell the most among commoditie­s, with nickel, tin and aluminium dropping to multimonth lows.

Three- month copper on the London Metal Exchange (LME) dropped as much as four percent to $6,081 a ton, its lowest since July last year, before recovering by the close of open outcry trading to $6,145, down 2.9%.

Zinc dropped by its six percent downside limit in Shanghai to 20,620 yuan per ton, the lowest since June last year.

LME zinc fell as much as 4.8% to $2,503, the lowest since June 2017, before paring losses to end at $2,563, off 2.6%.

LME lead failed to stabilize after its bounce, deepening losses just before the close to end 4.9% weaker at $2,200 a ton, the lowest since June last year.

Nickel, mainly used in stainless steel, got scant support after Chinese steel futures rose when the country’s biggest steelmakin­g city, Tangshan, said it would deepen output curbs over the summer, raising concerns of tight supplies in the market.

LME nickel bounced to finish at $13,880 a ton, a 1.9% drop, from a two-month low of $13,570.

“Our speculativ­e positionin­g estimates see nickel as the one remaining long across the complex at 2.8% of open interest… albeit down from the June peak of 33%,” Alastair Munro of broker Marex Spectron said in a note.

Among other industrial metals, aluminum fell 1.4% to close at $2,060 a ton while tin shed 2% to $19,375. —

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