RTRS:METALS-LME copper steady after China inflation data
* China inflation cools, leaves room for policy easing
* U.S. non-farm payrolls up 80,000 in June
* Coming Up: U.S. CFTC commitment of traders weekly; 1930
GMT
(Updates prices; adds quotes, details)
By Carrie Ho
SHANGHAI, July 9 (Reuters) - London copper was steady on
Monday as data showing China's inflation cooled in June
triggered hopes for policy easing by the top consumer of the
metal, offsetting a bleak U.S. jobs report that drove down
prices in the prior session.
China's annual consumer inflation came in at 2.2 percent,
from May's 3.0 percent, leaving room for Beijing to ease policy
without stoking upward price pressures and helping most
commodities recover from previous session's losses triggered by
the dismal U.S. jobs data.
Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange
edged up 0.1 percent to $7,538.75 per tonne by 0425 GMT,
snapping three sessions of losses. Prices dropped more than 2
percent on Friday.
The most-active October copper contract on the Shanghai
Futures Exchange fell 1.1 percent to 55,130 yuan
($8,700) per tonne, tracking the drop in LME prices in the
previous session and heading for its third session of losses.
"Better-than-expected China inflation numbers supported
sentiment, although technicals have a greater effect on prices
lately as investors continue to trade within safe narrow
ranges," said CIFCO Futures analyst Zhou Jie.
"In the short term, I see LME copper bound between $7,350
and $7,600, and Shanghai copper between 54,500 yuan and 56,000
yuan," Zhou said.
In the physical markets, analysts noted a slight uptick in
Chinese copper demand, although overall demand remained
sluggish. Investors are now awaiting China's commodities trade
data due later this week for fresh trading cues.
Arrivals of copper may have fallen in June compared to the
previous month, with term shipments in a seasonal decline.
In the euro zone, better-than-expected German industrial
production numbers were encouraging, but officials cautioned
against expectations of quick solutions to problems there,
especially out of a meeting later in the session among the
bloc's finance ministers.
The next set of macroeconomics data likely to affect metal
prices will be China's GDP numbers, which are due later this
week and likely to show its weakest expansion in three years.
In industry news, BHP Billiton will tighten global
copper supply from late 2013 onward if it postpones work on its
single-biggest project, the $30 billion expansion of the Olympic
Dam mine in Australia.
Base metals prices at 0425 GMT
Metal Last Change Pct Move YTD pct chg
LME Cu 7538.75 8.75 +0.12 -0.81
SHFE CU FUT OCT2 55130 -590 -1.06 -0.90
LME Alum 1898.50 2.50 +0.13 -6.01
SHFE AL FUT OCT2 15500 -105 -0.67 -2.15
HG COPPER SEP2 341.80 0.85 +0.25 -0.52
LME Zinc 1849.00 5.00 +0.27 0.22
SHFE ZN FUT OCT2 14680 -60 -0.41 -0.78
LME Nickel 16380.00 230.00 +1.42 -12.45
LME Lead 1864.00 4.00 +0.22 -8.40
SHFE PB FUT 14865 -65 -0.44 -2.78
LME Tin 18600.00 100.00 +0.54 -3.13
LME/Shanghai arb 1082
Shanghai and COMEX contracts show most active months
^ LME 3-m copper in yuan, including 17 pct VAT, minus SHFE
third month