Copper Rises in London, N.Y., on Speculation Demand to Increase 2006-10-06 09:08 (New York)
By Claudia Carpenter Oct. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Copper rose for a second consecutive day on speculation demand is increasing fast enough to erode global inventory. Stockpiles monitored by the London Metal Exchange dropped 0.3 percent to 114,050 metric tons, the lowest since Aug. 16, figures today from the exchange showed. Even with increased production next year, global inventory at the end of 2007 will be half the supply of 2002, Mitsui & Co. said in a report today. ``All eyes will remain on stock movements in the coming weeks to determine the price direction,'' said Alex Heath, director of base metals trading in London at RBC Capital Markets, a trader on the London Metal Exchange. ``This is the restocking period.'' Copper for delivery in three months rose $11, or 0.2 percent, to $7,310 a metric ton at 1:38 p.m. on the LME, after rising 3.8 percent yesterday. The metal is still down 3.1 percent this week, heading for the first weekly drop in three. Copper for delivery in December gained 2.5 cents, or 0.8 percent, to $3.325 a pound on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange. A futures contract is an obligation to buy or sell a commodity at a fixed price for a specific delivery date. Copper has lost 3.8 percent for the week, after gaining in each of the previous two weeks. The LME benchmark contract needs to stay above $7,000 a ton for the rally to continue, said Roy Carson, a London-based trader at Triland Metals Ltd., one of the 11 traders on the floor of the LME.
U.S. Housing Slowdown
Prices may drop next week on speculation that a slowdown in U.S. housing demand will curb consumption by the world's second- largest user of the metal. Six of 12 analysts, investors and traders surveyed by Bloomberg yesterday forecast copper will decline next week. Four expected a gain and two predicted little change. U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said Oct. 4 the housing market is in a ``substantial correction'' that will lop about a percentage point off economic growth in the second half and restrain expansion next year. An average family house contains 400 pounds of copper, found in wires and pipes. Nickel gained $450, or 1.6 percent, to $29,350 a ton in London. That's close to $29,900 a ton traded Aug. 22, the highest since 1987. Nickel, used as an alloy in stainless steel production, has more than doubled this year as production of stainless steel expanded.
Nickel Consumption
Consumption will jump 10 percent this year to 1.37 million metric tons, the Lisbon-based International Nickel Study Group said today. It will rise to 1.45 million tons next year. The INSG data show stainless-steel makers haven't been deterred by rising nickel prices. Production of stainless steel may jump 14 percent this year, the International Stainless Steel Forum said on Oct. 4. Refined-nickel production will rise to 1.35 million tons this year, from 1.29 million tons, the group said. That will increase to 1.45 million tons next year. Aluminum rose $5.50 to $2,547 a ton and lead gained $15 to $1,410. Tin advanced $50 to $9,100 and zinc jumped $80 to $3,520 a ton.
--With reporting by Chanyaporn Chanjaroen in London. Editor: Wallace (dje) |