MORNING VIEW: Base metals prices mixed as markets await direction from FOMC

The stronger tones in the base metals that have been seen this week were struggling to push ahead this morning, Wednesday September 16, because the market is waiting for direction, which is expected to come out of this evening’s US Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting.

  • Will the better-than-expected US recovery mean the FOMC does not need to be as dovish, especially if Congress’ relief package still lies ahead…
  • …or will the central bank be concerned about the lack of a relief package so far and the risk that the winter months may bring another surge in Covid-19 disruptions?

Base metals
Three-month base metals prices on the London Metal Exchange were mainly in positive territory this morning, the exception was nickel that was down by 0.1% at $15,230 per tonne. Tin was little changed at $18,230 per tonne and the rest were all up by 0.3%, with copper at $6,778 per tonne – overhead supply above $6,800 per tonne seems to be capping the upside for now.

While the base metals’ performance on the LME was generally positive, the most-traded base metals contracts on the Shanghai Futures Exchange were more mixed, with October copper and lead and November nickel all lower by an average of 0.4%, with copper down by 0.6% at 51,850 yuan ($7,642) per tonne. While October aluminium and zinc and November tin were up by an average of 0.3%

Precious metals

The spot gold price was up by 0.3% at $1,961.33 per oz this morning and after consolidating within a triangle since early-August, prices tried to break higher on Tuesday, but have run into overhead resistance – the market is likely to be choppy ahead of the FOMC decision.

Spot silver and platinum were both up by 0.7% at $27.31 and $979.50 per oz respectively, while palladium was down by 0.7% at $2,392.30 per oz – palladium’s bucking of the trend comes after a 4.2% gain on Tuesday.

Wider markets

The yield on US 10-year treasuries was recently quoted at 0.67%, unchanged from where it was at a similar time on Tuesday. The US treasury yield seems quite stable, suggesting the market is also waiting for direction from the Federal Reserve.

Asian-Pacific equities were mixed this morning: the CSI 300 (-0.57%), the Hang Seng (-0.09%), the Kospi (-0.38%), the Nikkei (+0.06%) and the ASX 200 (+1.02%).

Currencies
The dollar index was consolidating this morning and was recently quoted at 93.05, it was at 92.87 at a similar time on Tuesday – the range so far in September being 91.73-93.66.

With the dollar treading water, most of the other major currencies were doing the same this morning: the euro (1.1846), sterling (1.2896) and the Australian dollar (0.7319), but the yen (105.28) was strengthening.

Key data
Today’s FOMC rate decision, statement, economic projections and press conference will be the main focus today.

But ahead of that there is a barrage of price data out of the United Kingdom and trade balances from Japan and the European Union.

US data includes retail sales, business inventories, National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) housing market index, crude oil inventories and Treasury International Capital (TIC) long-term purchases.

Today’s key themes and views
Overall the upward trends across many asset classes appear to have run out of steam but prices are holding up well and dips continue to attract buying, suggesting “the trend is your friend”, but we also know markets do not move in straight line forever. Given the rallies since March have been heavily driven by a liquidity, today’s FOMC stance is therefore likely to be all important to market sentiment.

If there is a negative reaction in markets to the FOMC’s stance and a correction unfolds, we would still expect the underlying bullish themes focused on infrastructure to provide physical support to the base metals, albeit at lower price levels.

We expect gold prices to be choppy today until the FOMC statement.

What to read next
The Mexico Metals Outlook 2025 conference explored challenges and opportunities in the steel, aluminum and scrap markets, focusing on tariffs, nearshoring, capacity growth and global trends.
China has launched a coordinated crackdown on the illegal export of strategic minerals under export control, such as antimony, gallium, germanium, tungsten and rare earths, the country’s Ministry of Commerce announced on Friday May 9.
Fastmarkets proposes to amend the frequency of Taiwan base metals prices from biweekly to monthly, and the delivery timing for the tin 99.99% ingot premium from two weeks to four weeks.
The US-China trade truce announced on May 12 has brought cautious optimism to China’s non-ferrous metals markets, signaling a possible shift in global trade. Starting May 14, the removal of additional tariffs has impacted sectors like battery raw materials, minor metals and base metals such as zinc and nickel, with mixed reactions. While the improved sentiment has lifted futures prices and trade activity, the long-term effects remain unclear due to challenges like supply-demand pressures and export controls.
The publication of Fastmarkets’ assessments of Shanghai bonded aluminium, zinc and nickel stocks for April 30 were delayed because of a reporter error. Fastmarkets’ pricing database has been updated. The data effective for April 30 was published on May 7 as a result. The following assessments were affected:Shanghai aluminium bonded stocksShanghai zinc bonded stocksShanghai nickel […]
Global physical copper cathodes premiums were mixed in the week to Tuesday April 15, with US market moving down, Europe rising and Asia holding largely steady.