Metals Prices Seen Rising Until End 2001, Credit Lyonnais Says 5/24/0 11:31 (New York)
  Metals Prices Seen Rising Until End 2001, Credit Lyonnais Says
       London, May 24 (Bloomberg) -- Metal prices will rise during the next eighteen months thanks to growth in the world economy, said Credit Lyonnais Rouse Ltd, the metals broking division of France's fifth largest bank, in a report.      Expanding economies in Asia and Europe will boost demand for industrial metals, such as copper and nickel, said Maqsood Ahmed, an analyst at Credit Lyonnais, even if concerns that further interest rate rises could hamper economic growth in the U.S.      ``We're still looking at a very strong U.S. economy,'' Ahmed said. ``Growth is slowing to 3 percent a year, which for a mature economy is still quite phenomenal.''      Since the start of the year metals prices have been volatile on concerns U.S. economic growth will slow. Copper reached a high of $1,945 a metric ton in January and a low of $1,639 a ton last month before reaching $1,825 today. Investors will benefit from higher prices for the next 12 to 18 months, the report said.      Aluminum may increase by as much as $400 a ton in the next 18 months, Ahmed said, from about $1,500 this month. Key to prices will be demand and whether reorganization in Russia, which has seen 75 percent of production grouped under one company, will affect supplies.      Aluminum demand is expected to outstrip output this year and in 2001 by about 400,000 tons, the report said. World consumption may grow at 5.7 percent this year and 3.4 percent in 2001.      Copper may gain to $2,500 a ton next year from $1,825 a ton now as inventories continue to decline on higher demand from Asia. Global copper use is increasing by as much as 5 percent, with demand from China surging 10 percent, the report said. Copper stockpiles on the London Metal Exchange are currently at their lowest level since January 1999.
                              Steelmakers
       The steel industry is likely to help push zinc and nickel prices higher, the report said. Zinc could rise to between $1,300 a ton and $1,500 a ton from $1,182 partly on rising demand from steelmakers, which use the metal to protect products from rust.      Production from the stainless steel industry, which is up 11 percent in the year to date, could also boost nickel prices, pushing the metal as high as $15,000 a ton from $10,230 today.      Nickel prices have already doubled in the past year as supplies on the LME have dropped to their lowest level since March 1992. Inventory levels could fall to their lowest since 1989 as demand rises and new production from Australia fails to come on stream as quickly as traders anticipated.
  --Christopher Evans in the London newsroom (44) 20 7673 2645 or cevans@bloomberg.net/jxc |