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/AMZN
/2023.01.30
/Copper under pressure, China demand worry dominates mood.txt
LONDON, Jan 30 (Reuters) - Copper prices dropped on | |
Monday as worries about the outlook for demand in top consumer | |
China dominated sentiment ahead of data from the country's | |
manufacturing sector, while a softer dollar provided some | |
support.Benchmark copper on the London Metal Exchange was | |
down 0.7% at $9,197 a tonne at 1702 GMT. It hit a seven-month | |
high earlier this month as speculators piled in after China | |
removed its COVID-19 restrictions."Production of metal/copper containing goods in China, | |
things like cars and washing machines, rose significantly last | |
year. They don't need to be produced this year even if shoppers | |
return," said Julius Baer analyst Carsten Menke.Neither does Menke expect any boost to metals demand from | |
the property sector. "China's population is shrinking, demand | |
for property is declining structurally, why would the government | |
use property to stimulate growth?"Clues to demand prospects will come from surveys of | |
purchasing managers in China's manufacturing sector this week.A lower U.S. currency makes dollar-priced metals cheaper for | |
holders of other currencies, which could boost demand.The future direction of interest and currency rates could be | |
determined by earnings reports from Apple, Alphabet | |
and Amazon and a meeting of the Federal | |
Reserve this week."We have long argued that the Fed will need to take a rate | |
pause at some point, but we think it will not do so at this | |
particular meeting," Edward Meir, analyst at ED&F Man Capital | |
Markets, said.Technical support for copper is around $9,025 where a | |
Fibonacci retracement level and the 21-day moving average meet.Meanwhile, the zinc market is focused on dwindling stocks in | |
LME approved warehouses <MZN-STOCKS>, which at 17,425 tonnes are | |
at their lowest since 1989 and large holdings of zinc warrants | |
and cash contracts <0#LME-WHC>.Concern about availability on the LME has created a premium | |
or backwardation for the cash over the three-month zinc | |
contracts <CMZN0-3>, which was last trading at $26 a tonne.Three-month zinc was up 0.7% at $3,438 a tonne.In other metals, aluminium was down 1.5% at $2,588 a | |
tonne, lead fell 1.7% to $2,145, tin ceded 3.6% | |
to $29,740 and nickel was up 1.5% at $29,350. | |
(Reporting by Pratima Desai; editing by Kirsten Donovan and | |
Barbara Lewis) |