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Gold/Mining/Energy : Copper - analysis -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Stephen O who wrote (1548)1/8/2007 3:05:37 PM
From: Stephen O  Respond to of 2131
 
Copper Gains in New York on Speculation Chinese Demand May Rise
2007-01-08 11:08 (New York)

By Millie Munshi and Halia Pavliva
Jan. 8 (Bloomberg) -- Copper prices in New York rose the
most in a month, halting a slump that sent prices tumbling in
the first week of the new year, on speculation demand from China
may gain.
The metal, used in pipes and wire, fell 12 percent last
week, touching a nine-month low, as a slowdown in U.S. housing
resulted in increased inventories. Copper has still gained 23
percent in the past year as mine accidents and labor disputes
disrupted supplies.
``People came back on Monday and decided the sell-off was
enough,'' said Patrick Chidley, an analyst at Barnard Jacobs
Mellet LLC in Stamford, Connecticut. Demand may pick up as
Chinese buyers come back to the market, he said.
Copper futures for March delivery gained 3.5 cents, or 1.4
percent, to $2.574 a pound at 11:08 a.m. on the Comex division
of the New York Mercantile Exchange. A close at that price would
be the biggest one-day gain since Dec. 5. Futures more than
tripled in the past five years as demand boomed from China, the
world's largest consumer of the metal.
A futures contract is an obligation to buy or sell a
commodity at a fixed price for delivery by a specific date.

Chinese Buyers

Chinese buyers may come back into the market after the
Chinese New Year on February 18, UBS AG analysts said in a
report today.
``We expect that the Chinese could begin to re-enter the
copper market in early 2007,'' the analysts, led by Daniel
Brebner, said. ``The spring period is a seasonally positive one
for metals.''
On the London Metal Exchange, copper for delivery in three
months rose $64, or 1.1 percent, to $5,675 a metric ton at 4:05
p.m. local time. Prices fell 11 percent last week.
Last week's drop was ``driven by hedge fund liquidation,''.
``Copper market fundamentals remain solid,'' Goldman Sachs
analysts, led by Hongyu Cai, said in a report yesterday
Inventories remain historically low, they said.
Stockpiles monitored by warehouses in London, Shanghai and
New York have gained 55 percent in the last year, to 258,861
tons. That's still less than one week of global consumption,
Goldman Sachs said.
Gains in the amount of LME copper stockpiles bought and due
for future deliveries, known as canceled warrants, may be a
signal that demand is picking up, the analysts said.
Canceled warrants more than doubled to 17,325 tons last
week. The gain may be an indication that China is re-stocking
inventories, Goldman Sachs said.

--Editor: Enoch (jvb).