Metals – Prices rise on China reopening optimism
Base metal prices rose yesterday amid optimism over China’s economic recovery and declining exchange inventories. A weakening US dollar further boosted the metals complex. LME copper 3M prices rose more than 3% yesterday, while zinc and aluminium rallied by more than 6%. Nickel was the only base metal to settle lower, likely a result of reports that Tsingshan is looking to boost refined nickel output by repurposing some copper facilities in China. This move would be to take advantage of the large premium for class 1 refined nickel, a part of the market which is still tight.
Copper inventories immediately available to withdraw from the LME warehouses fell by the most in a month. On-warrant stockpiles declined by 2,050 tonnes to 71,850 tonnes, driven by declines in warehouses in Rotterdam.
The latest SMM survey shows that China’s copper cathode production fell 3.3% MoM to 870kt in December, as some smelters undertook maintenance last month resulting in reduced monthly output. Meanwhile, Covid outbreaks also lowered smelter production, while output from the two newly commissioned smelters remained below expectations. Chinese primary aluminium production rose 8.3% YoY to 3.44mt in December. For full-year 2022, output rose 4.1% YoY to 40.1mt.
In alumina, a production unit has been taken offline at Alcoa’s Kwinana Alumina refinery in Australia, representing about a 30% cut in production at the refinery, amid ongoing gas supply challenges in Western Australia. No timeline has been given for restoring full output.
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