Home

 
India Bullion iPhone Application
  Quick Links
Currency Futures Trading

MCX Strategy

Precious Metals Trading

IBCRR

Forex Brokers

Technicals

Precious Metals Trading

Economic Data

Commodity Futures Trading

Fixes

Live Forex Charts

Charts

World Gold Prices

Reports

Forex COMEX India

Contact Us

Chat

Bullion Trading Bullion Converter
 

$ Price :

 
 

Rupee :

 
 

Price in RS :

 
 
Specification
  More Links
Forex NCDEX India

Contracts

Live Gold Prices

Price Quotes

Gold Bullion Trading

Research

Forex MCX India

Partnerships

Gold Commodities

Holidays

Forex Currency Trading

Libor

Indian Currency

Advertisement

 
BLBG: Copper Declines in London Trading as Some Investors Sell to Lock In Gains
 
Copper fell in London as some investors sold the metal to lock in profits from the biggest advance in almost two weeks and stockpiles increased.

Copper for three-month delivery rose 1.9 percent yesterday on the London Metal Exchange, the most since Sept. 1. Inventories tracked by the LME edged higher today after shrinking for seven days in a row. The metal also retreated as a gauge of German investor confidence fell more than analysts expected to a 19-month low.

“LME prices are flat to slightly weaker as the complex suffers from profit-taking” before the release of U.S. economic figures, said David Thurtell, a Citigroup Inc. analyst in London.

Copper for delivery in three months slid $57 or 0.7 percent, to $7,573 a metric ton at 10:22 a.m. on the LME. Copper for delivery in December fell 1 percent to $3.4445 a pound on the Comex in New York.

Sales at retailers in the U.S., the world’s second-biggest copper user after China, probably rose in August for a second month, economists said before the scheduled release of Commerce Department figures at 1:30 p.m. London time. Purchases climbed 0.3 percent following a 0.4 percent gain in July, according to the median estimate of 76 economists.

Index Slides

Germany’s ZEW Center for European Economic Research said its index of investor and analyst confidence, which aims to predict developments six months ahead, dropped to minus 4.3 from 14 in August. Economists had forecast a reading of 10, according to the median of 36 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey.

The figures “pointed to a deterioration in the currently strong conditions,” Thurtell said. Germany is the world’s third-biggest consumer of copper after China and the U.S.

China, the largest user of industrial metals, is in “good shape,” Premier Wen Jiabao said yesterday, while cautioning that rising property prices threaten to stoke unrest. Copper rose yesterday after figures showed that industrial production in the nation expanded more than analysts had predicted.

LME copper stockpiles today gained 75 tons to 390,525 tons, according to daily exchange figures. Still, they have dropped 22 percent in 2010, heading for the first annual contraction in six years.

Nomura Estimate

“We forecast inventories to fall sharply through 2011 and 2012,” analysts at Nomura Holdings Inc. led by Paul Cliff in London wrote in a report dated Sept. 10.

Demand probably will outpace supply by 263,000 tons this year, with the gap widening to 664,000 tons next year, Nomura said. It predicted an average price this year for immediate- delivery copper of $7,485 a ton, rising to $8,377 next year.

Orders to draw copper from LME inventories, or canceled warrants, jumped 10 percent, the most since Aug. 18, to 22,825 tons.

Aluminum for three-month delivery on the LME fell 0.3 percent to $2,124 a ton. The lightweight metal should reach $2,400 by the end of the year, Laredo, Texas-based researcher Harbor Intelligence said in a report.

“A weak dollar, falling fear, accelerating demand in China and falling aluminum output in that country have increased our conviction of higher prices for the next quarter,” Harbor said.

Nickel slipped 0.2 percent to $22,825 a ton. LME stocks, down 25 percent this year, rose 0.2 percent to 119,034 tons. Cash nickel’s discount to three-month metal widened to $6 a ton yesterday from $4, the narrowest level since Sept. 2, 2009, in the prior session. Cash metal was at a $45 discount a week ago.

Tin slid 0.5 percent to $22,200 a ton after yesterday touching $22,301, the highest intraday price since July 30, 2008. The metal is this year’s best performer on the LME, rising 31 percent.

Lead dropped 1.4 percent to $2,220 a ton and zinc fell 0.4 percent to $2,136.75 a ton.

To contact the reporter on the story: Anna Stablum in London at astablum@bloomberg.net.

Source