Major Chinese smelters mull reducing domestic sales amid low copper prices

Some major Chinese smelters are considering reducing their deliveries into the domestic market due to the copper price slump, market sources have said.

Some major Chinese smelters are considering reducing their deliveries into the domestic market due to the copper price slump, market sources have said.

Domestic supplies have already been reduced as a result of the fall in prices.

A source from one of the leading smelters told Metal Bulletin that his company has already reduced deliveries into the market due to the pressure from falling cathode prices.

“I’m not sure whether others will follow suit, but I see less cargoes from our plant,” the source said.

Copper prices have fallen to six-year lows amid Chinese stock market volatility, slow Chinese demand and the expectation of interest rate hikes in the US.

Copper prices on the Shanghai Futures Exchange closed at 38,940 yuan per tonne as of 11:30am on Thursday, up from a low of 37,790 yuan per tonne hit last Friday.

Metal Bulletin sister publication Copper Price Briefing assessed London Metal Exchange premiums at $75-90 per tonne on an in-warehouse Shanghai basis on Wednesday July 29, up from $60-75 per tonne a week ago.

“The material being traded in the market now is more from the import side. There is very limited domestic material available these days,” a Shanghai-based trader said.

The open arbitrage between Shanghai and London has encouraged import activity, however.

The increase in supply from the import side has eased domestic tightness slightly, dragging down local physical premiums, which have declined to about 150 yuan per tonne.

Kiki Kang
Kiki.kang@metalbulletinasia.com
Wechat: KikiKang_MB

What to read next
Brazil's aluminium industry is further enhancing its sustainability by boosting renewable energy use and recycling, while mitigating risk from high-carbon imports
German copper producer Aurubis is among the least likely to consider reducing capacity despite record low treatment charges (TCs), according to its chief executive officer
European copper demand, particularly for wire rod, remains strong and seems to be outpacing broader macro-economic growth in the region, the chief executive officer of German producer Aurubis has said.
The process to place the smaller and less efficient of the two processing plants at Los Bronces on care and maintenance is expected to be completed by mid-2024 and comes as the company pushes value over volume, the chief executive officer of Anglo American Chile said
The near-term prospects for Chinese copper smelting capacity amid near-zero treatment charges (TCs) will, to a certain extent, depend on plants’ exposure to spot TCs, the chief executive officer of Rio Tinto’s copper division said on Tuesday, April 16
It will be very difficult for many Chinese copper smelters to compete with treatment and refining charges (TC/RCs) at record lows, according to the chairman of Chile’s state-owned copper producer Codelco