LIVE FUTURES REPORT 03/10: LME base metals diverge amid China absence; copper prices lower on profit-taking, stronger dollar

Base metals prices on the London Metal Exchange diverged amid thin trading volumes during the Asian morning trading session on Tuesday October 3, with copper weighed down by profit-taking and a stronger dollar.

The LME three-month copper contract traded at $6,460 per tonne as of 03:30 BST, down $33 from Monday’s close, with around 300 lots of the contract changing hands so far.

With Chinese markets, including the Shanghai Futures Exchange, closed for the country’s National Day Golden Week holiday (October 2-6), trading has been quiet.

“We remain bullish for copper’s fundamentals but prices had started to look overstretched recently so some profit-taking seemed probable, which is now unfolding,” William Adams, senior analyst at Metal Bulletin, said.

“We would not be surprised if prices remain under pressure for a while longer or at least remain choppy. The stronger dollar is also no doubt acting as a headwind,” he added.

The LME copper price has eased since hitting as high as $6,970 per tonne on September 5, this was the highest since September 2014.

Throughout September, copper prices erased August’s rally due to a surge in LME stocks, a stronger dollar and meddling Chinese data. Additionally, Hurricanes Irma and Maria devastated the US city of Houston and the Caribbean, affecting short-term demand for commodities, INTL FCStone analyst Edward Meir said in a research note recently.

Copper prices are expected to maintain the current range and trade between $6,365-6,770 per tonne in October amid easing geopolitical tensions and calmer market conditions, Meir forecast.

The dollar, already seeing support from expectations of a US interest rate rise in December, rose further following the release of strong US economic data on Monday. The country’s ISM manufacturing purchasing managers’ index (PMI) for September was at 60.8, higher than both the expected reading of 57.9 and August’s print of 58.8.

The USA’s final manufacturing PMI for September was close to expectations at 53.1, while August construction spending rose 0.5% month on month, also largely in line with expectations. ISM manufacturing prices for September came in at 71.5, higher than the forecast reading of 64.5.

Base metals prices

  • The LME three-month zinc contract fell $1.50 to $3,234.50 per tonne.
  • The LME three-month aluminium contract price increased $5 to $2,106 per tonne.
  • The LME three-month lead contract price gained $6 to $2,524 per tonne.
  • The LME three-month nickel contract price edged up $90 to $10,480 per tonne
  • The LME three-month contract price slipped $15 to $20,660 per tonne.

Currency moves and data releases

  • The dollar index was up 0.26% to 93.85 as of 03:28 BST after reaching as high as 93.89 on Tuesday, which was the highest since August 17.
  • In other commodities, the Brent crude oil spot price fell 0.27% to $55.86 per barrel as of 03:29 BST.
  • In EU data on Monday, EU final manufacturing PMI was recorded at 58.1 for September, up from 57.4 the previous month. Spanish, French and Italian manufacturing PMI were all higher while Italian manufacturing PMI was unchanged at 56.3.
  • The economic agenda is light today with mainly UK construction PMI and Europe’s producer price index due later.
  • In addition, US Federal Open Market Committee member Jerome Powell is speaking in Washington DC, USA.

LME snapshot at 0330 London time
Latest 3M  LME Prices
  Price ($/t)  Change since yesterday’s close ($)
Copper 6,460 -33
Aluminium 2,106 5
Lead 2,524 6
Zinc 3,234.50 -1.5
Tin 20,660 -15
Nickel 10,480 90
What to read next
Fastmarkets has corrected the pricing rationale for MB-AL-0302 aluminium 6063 extrusion billet premium, ddp North Germany (Ruhr region), $/tonne, which was published incorrectly on Friday April 19. No prices were corrected.
The low-carbon aluminium differential in the US made its first move on Friday April 5 since Fastmarkets launched it five months ago.
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