Copper Rises to Record in London on U.S. Durable-Goods Increase 2005-11-29 12:45 (New York)
By Stuart Wallace and Simon Casey Nov. 29 (Bloomberg) -- Copper rose to a record in London after U.S. durable-goods orders increased in October twice as much as forecast, signaling strengthening demand from the world's No. 2 user. Other metals rose to multiyear highs. Durable-goods orders rose 3.4 percent, the Commerce Department in Washington said. Economists forecast a 1.5 percent increase, based on the median of 61 estimates in a Bloomberg survey. This year the U.S. will consume 3.07 million tons of copper, which is used in wiring and water pipes, Standard Bank in London said in a Nov. 1 report. China is the largest user. ``That's positive for base metals,'' including copper, said Michael Purdy, a trader at ABN Amro Bank in New York. ``Demand is going to keep on increasing with the world economies improving.'' Copper for delivery in three months on the London Metal Exchange climbed as high as $4,257 a metric ton, beating the record set on Nov. 18 by $14. The contract advanced $7, or 0.2 percent, to $4,231 as of 5:07 p.m. local time. Copper has gained 34 percent this year. Copper also rose after U.S. new home sales unexpectedly increased to a record last month. Purchases grew 13 percent, the biggest gain since April 1993, to a 1.424 million annual rate from 1.26 million in September, the Commerce Department said. Construction accounts for 48 percent of copper demand, according to the New York-based Copper Development Association. A single-family home contains 400 pounds of the metal.
Chinese Auctions
Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc. said fourth-quarter production from its Grasberg mine in Indonesia, the world's second-largest copper mine, is ``slightly short'' of the company's targets because of lower-grade ores. Copper output is 5 percent below a target of 480 million pounds, the Baton Rouge, Louisiana-based company said today in a statement. Copper prices may fall if China extends sales of stockpiled metal, analysts said. China's State Reserve Bureau, or SRB, a government stockpiling agency, must deliver as much as 130,000 metric tons of copper to overseas markets by Dec. 21, the state- run China Daily said Nov. 24. The SRB has held auctions for 40,000 tons of inventory this month and plans to sell 20,000 tons on Nov. 31. It may hold further sales, said Societe Generale analyst Stephen Briggs. ``There's this huge uncertainty about the Chinese position,'' London-based Briggs said in an interview today. Societe Generale is one of the 11 companies that trade on the floor of the London Metal Exchange.
Production Shortfall
Chinese stockpile sales will increase supply of the metal amid forecasts that global production this year won't meet demand. Standard Bank in London said in its report that the shortfall will be 343,000 tons in 2005. Inventory tracked by the London Metal Exchange, the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange and the Shanghai Futures Exchange is at 149,143 metric tons, according to Bloomberg data. That's equal to about three days of global usage. Aluminum, which is used in beverage cans and cars, rose $5.50, or 0.3 percent, to $2,122 a ton. Earlier it traded as high as $2,132, beating the 10-year high set yesterday by $13. Aluminum's production shortfall next year will be 266,000 tons, Macquarie Bank said Oct. 31. The deficit may widen as high power prices lead companies to close unprofitable smelters. Pittsburgh-based Alcoa Inc., the world's No. 1 aluminum producer, said Nov. 23 it will close its 195,000 ton-a-year Eastalco smelter next month because of the rising cost of electricity.
`Buying All Metals'
Zinc rose $12 to $1,702 a ton. Earlier it traded as high as $1,705, exceeding yesterday's 15-year high of $1,690.80. Zinc demand will exceed output by 155,000 tons this year and by 145,000 tons in 2006, Natexis Commodity Markets said in an Oct. 31 report. ``We can see that there is no sign that the uptrend in industrial metal prices is ending,'' said Cai Luoyi, the Shanghai-based head of research at China International Futures (Shanghai) Co., in an interview today. ``Funds are buying all industrial metals.'' Lead rose $3 to $1,020, after earlier trading at a record $1,020. This year there will be a production shortfall in lead, used in rechargeable batteries, of 28,000 tons, Barclays Capital said in an Oct. 19 report. Nickel was unchanged at $13,050 and tin was $30 higher at $6,130.
--With reporting by Choy Leng Yeong in Seattle. Editor: Carrigan (jao) |