A very odd occurrence. Apparently, the Chinese government has been caught in a huge short squeeze in the copper market. There are rumors that the short position is so large that there aren't sufficient copper stocks worldwide to cover the commitments.
The Chinese might take a big bath on this one!
From the FT...
The Chinese might take a big bath on this one!
From the FT...
Uncertainty lifts copper to all-time high
By Maria Silander
Published: November 15 2005 12:08 | Last updated: November 15 2005 20:55
copper prices up
Speculation over the trading activities of China’s State Reserve Bureau pushed copper to a new all-time high in London on Tuesday.
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Copper touched a peak of $4,175 a tonne as traders bet that the SRB, the Chinese government body charged with regulating the country’s strategic holdings of metals, would have to buy large amounts of the metal to cover trading commitments. Liu Qibing, a Chinese trader, allegedly built up a substantial short position in copper in the name of SRB, said to be between 100,000 and 200,000 tonnes.
There was speculation that China was selling large amounts of copper reserves to push prices down so as to reduce potential losses. The SRB has vowed to auction 20,000 tonnes of copper today. Analysts do not think the SRB has enough copper to stabilise the market.
At the end of open outcry trading in London, copper was trading at $4,135 a tonne, up $19.
Other metal markets were mixed. The three-month aluminium contract eased $46 from Monday’s late price to $2,005 a tonne on news of increasing daily inventories in London while zinc touched an eight-year high of $1,620.5 a tonne amid decreasing London Metal Exchange daily inventories.
Brent crude oil for December delivery touched a five-month low of $54 a barrel on expectations of US refiners increasing stockpiles of winter fuel after a warm early winter. It rebounded to reach $54.40 but closed down 68 cents at $54.05.
West Texas Intermediate, the US benchmark, gained on expectations of colder weather approaching northeast US. WTI for December delivery was at $58.05 a barrel in Nymex trading, before falling to settle at $56.98, down 71 cents.
Platinum was nearly unchanged at Monday’s 25 year peak in Europe despite a positive market outlook in the latest report by precious metals refiner Johnson Matthey. Platinum was trading at $967 a troy ounce, down $3 from its last quote in New York.
Gold rose to $467.90/$468.40 a troy ounce, up 30 cents on late quotes in New York on Monday.
By Maria Silander
Published: November 15 2005 12:08 | Last updated: November 15 2005 20:55
copper prices up
Speculation over the trading activities of China’s State Reserve Bureau pushed copper to a new all-time high in London on Tuesday.
ADVERTISEMENT
Copper touched a peak of $4,175 a tonne as traders bet that the SRB, the Chinese government body charged with regulating the country’s strategic holdings of metals, would have to buy large amounts of the metal to cover trading commitments. Liu Qibing, a Chinese trader, allegedly built up a substantial short position in copper in the name of SRB, said to be between 100,000 and 200,000 tonnes.
There was speculation that China was selling large amounts of copper reserves to push prices down so as to reduce potential losses. The SRB has vowed to auction 20,000 tonnes of copper today. Analysts do not think the SRB has enough copper to stabilise the market.
At the end of open outcry trading in London, copper was trading at $4,135 a tonne, up $19.
Other metal markets were mixed. The three-month aluminium contract eased $46 from Monday’s late price to $2,005 a tonne on news of increasing daily inventories in London while zinc touched an eight-year high of $1,620.5 a tonne amid decreasing London Metal Exchange daily inventories.
Brent crude oil for December delivery touched a five-month low of $54 a barrel on expectations of US refiners increasing stockpiles of winter fuel after a warm early winter. It rebounded to reach $54.40 but closed down 68 cents at $54.05.
West Texas Intermediate, the US benchmark, gained on expectations of colder weather approaching northeast US. WTI for December delivery was at $58.05 a barrel in Nymex trading, before falling to settle at $56.98, down 71 cents.
Platinum was nearly unchanged at Monday’s 25 year peak in Europe despite a positive market outlook in the latest report by precious metals refiner Johnson Matthey. Platinum was trading at $967 a troy ounce, down $3 from its last quote in New York.
Gold rose to $467.90/$468.40 a troy ounce, up 30 cents on late quotes in New York on Monday.
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