MORNING VIEW: Base metals start to recover after Tuesday sell-off – all eyes on US Fed

Base metals prices on the London Metal Exchange were up across the board this morning, Wednesday July 7, suggesting dip buying after Tuesday’s weakness that saw copper, aluminium and nickel fall by 2%, or more.

  • Tuesday’s drop in the ISM services purchasing managers index (PMI) to 60.1, from 64, was partly blamed for the day’s weaker markets…
  • …as was the jump in the US Dollar Index

Base metals
LME three-month base metals prices were up by an average of 0.8% on Wednesday, led by a 1.4% gain in copper to $9,336.50 per tonne, but this upturn followed average losses across the complex of 1.2% on Tuesday, when only lead was able to hold on to any gains. Early trading on Tuesday suggested copper prices had broken higher, but yesterday’s weakness calls that into question. That said, yesterday’s weakness does seem to have run into dip buying and, overall, the metals seem to be holding up well.

The most-active base metals on the Shanghai Futures Exchange were mixed this morning, with the August contracts for copper, aluminium, nickel and tin were down by an average of 1.2% (suggesting they were reacting to Tuesday’s weakness on the LME), while August lead and zinc are bucking the trend with gains of 0.6% and 0.5%. August copper was down by 1.1% this morning at 68,950 yuan ($10,660) per tonne.

While the base metals were generally lower, October rebar was up by 2.8% and the September iron ore price on the Dalian Commodity Exchange was up by 0.9%.

Precious metals
Spot precious metals were higher across the board with gains averaging 0.8%; spot gold was up by 0.5% at $1,803.82 per oz.

Wider markets
The yield on US 10-year treasuries has fallen further, it was recently at 1.34%, down from 1.44% at a similar time on Tuesday. It’s not clear whether this is a sign of a pick-up in haven demand, or just that the market is confident that the United States Federal Reserve is not going to rock the boat. Perhaps the market is nervous in case the US Fed is seen to be more hawkish and that weighs on equity markets – we should get an update on that when the minutes of the Fed’s latest Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting are released this evening.

Asia-Pacific equities were mixed on Wednesday: the Nikkei (-0.96%), the Kospi (-0.6%), the Hang Seng (-0.5%), the ASX 200 (+0.9%) and the CSI 300 (+1.13%).

Currencies
The US Dollar Index jumped higher on Tuesday and was recently at 95.52, after a low yesterday of 92. The rebound suggests the dollar strength that was seen in June may have further to run, with recent weakness just a pause. If so, this could be a headwind for the metals. Although the next direction is likely to depend on what the Fed’s minutes reveal.

Most major currencies were on a back foot on Wednesday morning: the Australian dollar (0.7510), the euro (1.1825) and sterling (1.3802), while the Japanese yen (110.62) was generally strong.

Key data
Economic data already out on Wednesday showed Japan’s leading indicators fell to 102.6% in May, from 103.8% in April, German industrial production fell by 0.3% in May, it was expected to rise by 0.5% and Italian retail sales climbed by 0.2% in May, having been expected to rise by 3.1%.

Later there is United States data on job openings, and economic optimism.

In addition, the EU will release its economic forecast and the US Fed will release the minutes from its recent FOMC meeting, with committee member Raphael Bostic scheduled to speak.

Wednesday’s key themes and views
On Tuesday, we said the metals were looking more upbeat because copper had broken higher, but given the weakness seen yesterday the market looks a bit flighty, so we will wait to see if the dip buying pushes copper back above $9,550-9,600 per tonne. If it does, then things will look more bullish again. Given this is the summer slowdown in the northern hemisphere, any such move is likely to be led by investors – unless the spread of the Delta variant of Covid-19 increases the threats to mine supplies or logistics, which could prompt restocking.

Gold prices have broken out of their consolidation pattern and also seem to have a tailwind, which is impressive given the stronger dollar – so maybe haven demand is on the up?

What to read next
The rationale for AG-PLM-0017 crude palm oil, Indonesia PTPN tender had erroneously stated 1,000 tonnes traded, 5,000 tonnes offered. This has been been corrected to 1,500 tonnes traded, 5,000 tonnes offered. The published price is unaffected by this change. These prices are part of the Fastmarkets Ags Oils, Fats and Biofuels package. For more information or to provide […]
Mexico’s strategic role in automotive nearshoring is fueling demand for recycled aluminium, with investment in scrap-intensive sectors boosting its non-ferrous secondary markets. Despite tariff uncertainties, USMCA compliance and EV production growth continue to attract global manufacturers.
Goldcorp founder Rob McEwen is back in the spotlight with a bold bet on copper in Argentina. The $2.5 billion Los Azules project, set to become Argentina’s first major copper mine in over 30 years, is reshaping the country’s mining industry while raising sustainability standards. Positioned as a key player in addressing a global copper shortage, the project highlights innovation, persistence and a commitment to meeting the growing demand from global electrification.
The data for May 30 was published on Fastmarkets’ dashboard on June 2 as a result. For more information, or to provide feedback on the delayed publication of this assessment, or if you would like to provide information by becoming a data submitter to the Shanghai bonded aluminium stocks database, please contact Zachary Tia by […]
Fastmarkets has decided not to proceed with the proposed amendment to the name and specifications of the MB-IRO-0008 iron ore 62% Fe fines cfr Qingdao index. After a consultation period, Fastmarkets has determined that current circumstances do not make the proposed amendments to the index viable. Fastmarkets reserves the right to start a fresh consultation on […]
Following the month-long consultation period, the name and the specifications of the abovementioned value-in-use adjustments will be amended in line with the launch of the MB-IRO-0191 61% Fe iron ore fines, cfr Qingdao index. MB-IRO-0018 Iron ore 61% fines, % Fe VIU, cfr Qingdao, $/tonneIron Value In Use adjustments (Fe -VIU)Value of Iron Ore at X% Iron […]