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


To: LoneClone who wrote (1719)4/10/2007 6:45:55 PM
From: Stephen O  Respond to of 2131
 
Copper Prices Rise to Six-Month High on Surging Chinese Imports
2007-04-10 14:01 (New York)

By Millie Munshi and Halia Pavliva
April 10 (Bloomberg) -- Copper prices in New York rose to
the highest in almost six months on signs of surging demand from
China, the world's biggest consumer of the metal.
China's imports of copper and copper products rose 61
percent from a year earlier to 307,740 metric tons in March, the
highest ever. Booming demand from China, the world's fastest-
growing major economy, has sent prices soaring 43 percent since
early February.
``Copper is very strong on insatiable Chinese demand and I
don't see it going away anytime soon,'' said Matthew Zeman, a
metals trader at LaSalle Futures Group in Chicago. ``Prices are
going to go up from here.''
Copper futures for May delivery rose 2 cents, or 0.6
percent, to $3.526 a pound on the Comex division of the New York
Mercantile Exchange, the highest closing price for a most-active
contract since Oct. 16.
Prices may reach $3.80 a pound in the next 90 days as global
growth remains strong, Zeman said. Copper, used in pipes and
wires for homes, cars and appliances, generally moves in tandem
with the economy.
On the London Metal Exchange, the metal surged to a seven-
month high. Copper for delivery in three months gained $360, or
4.9 percent, to $7,700, after earlier trading at $7,898.75, the
highest since Sept. 8.

`Not Unhealthy'

``The world economy is not unhealthy, so there is physical
demand for copper,'' said Jim Wyckoff, senior markets analyst at
TradingEducation.com in Wesley Chapel, Florida.
The International Monetary Fund predicts global gross
domestic product will increase 4.9 percent this year, the fourth
straight year of growth above 4.5 percent. That would be the best
performance since at least 1980, when the fund started keeping
records. The fund will release its updated forecast tomorrow.
Stockpiles of copper monitored by the LME, the world's
biggest metals market, declined 0.8 percent to 177,600 metric
tons today, the lowest since Dec. 20, according to Bloomberg
data. Inventories have fallen 15 percent since the end of
February.
Copper, which has gained for five straight weeks, may fall
this week as the higher prices deter buyers and traders lock in
profits, said Donald Selkin, director of equity research at
Joseph Steven & Co.
``It's gotten a little bit ahead of itself and we're getting
close to the near-term top,'' Selkin said. ``That doesn't mean
we're going to be entering a bear market. It just needs to cool
off a little bit.''
A futures contract is an obligation to buy or sell a
commodity at a fixed price for delivery by a specific date.

--With reporting by William McQuillen in Washington. Editor: Farr
(dje).

Story illustration: For metals prices, charts and mining
statistics, see {MINE <GO>}. For more commodity news, see
{CTOP <GO>}.

To contact the reporter on this story:
Millie Munshi in New York at +1-212-617-5543 or
mmunshi@bloomberg.net;
Halia Pavliva in New York at +1-212-617-7221 or
hpavliva@bloomberg.net.