China's Interest Rate Cut Boosts Industrial Metals, Russian Aluminium Dominates LME Warehouses; USDA Slashes Corn Crop Ratings Due to Dry Weather
ING Economics 13.06.2023 13:24
Metals – Share of Russian aluminium in LME warehouses grows
Industrial metals (except for nickel) edged higher in the morning session as China trimmed its short-term policy interest rate unexpectedly. The People’s Bank of China lowered its 7-day reverse repurchase rate by 10bps to 1.9% in a sign that Beijing has been taking measures to support flagging economic growth. The move also provides some confidence to the market that China could take further steps to push up economic growth.
Recent data from LME shows that the share of Russian aluminium inventory out of total exchange inventory increased to 68% in May from 52% in April following increased withdrawals of aluminium from LME warehouses in Asia. The data shows that there was a total of 263,125 tonnes of Russian aluminium in exchange warehouses, while Indian-origin aluminium stood at 116,800 tonnes falling from 46.5% in April to 30% in May. Meanwhile, the exchange said that 19% of the 167,550 tonnes of aluminium requested for delivery in May was still Russian metal.
Agriculture – USDA slashes weekly corn crop ratings on dry weather
The United States Department of Agriculture's (USDA’s) latest crop progress report shows that US soybean plantings continue to rise with 96% planted as of 11 June, well above the 87% seen at the same stage last year and above the five-year average of 86%.
Similarly, spring wheat plantings are 97% complete, which is above the 92% planted at the same stage last season, and in line with the five-year average. On the crop condition, the agency rated around 38% of the winter wheat crop in good-to-excellent condition, up from 36% a week ago, and 31% seen last year. On the other hand, the USDA rated 61% of the corn crop in good-to-excellent condition as of 11 June, lower from 64% a week ago and 72% seen at the same stage last year, largely on account of dry weather.
The USDA’s weekly export inspection data for the week ending 8 June pointed towards weakening demand for US grains. USDA’s export inspections of corn stood at 1,169.1kt in the abovementioned period, lower than the 1,206.8kt in the previous week and 1,221.8kt reported a year ago. For wheat, US export inspections stood at 246.6kt, down from 304.4kt from a week ago and 411.9kt reported a year ago. Meanwhile, US soybean export inspections fell to 140.2kt compared to 222.3kt from a week ago and 609kt from a year ago.