Mining

Copper price in biggest drop since height of pandemic

It was the biggest decline since mid-March at the height of the covid-19 induced sell-off, which sent the copper price crashing to below $2.00 a pound – levels last seen during the global financial crisis.  

S&P Global reports a rapid buildup of inventories in warehouses managed by the London Metal Exchange could be behind today’s decline after inflows of almost 92,000 tonnes over the space of just three days.

TD Securities’ head of commodity strategy Bart Melek told S&P Global that, “following months of steeply drawing inventories resulting from a powerful ‘V-shaped’ recovery in China, combined with a cascading global re-opening and constrained supply amid social-distancing enforcement at operations, the substantial inflows into LME warehouses have eased the near-term tightness that has propelled copper to multi-year highs.”

Wild swings

Thursday’s decline comes just a day after copper leapfrogged the pivotal $3 a pound level and looked ready to retake levels last seen in 2018 after a key gauge of the Chinese manufacturing sector, the world’s top consumer of the metal, showed new orders jumping to a nine-year high.

Capital Economics said China’s September PMI readings suggest that “the economy is now entering a period of above-trend growth, which is indisputably good news for the prices of commodities, particularly industrial metals.”

The Wall Street Journal reported yesterday a measure from Citigroup that tracks end uses of copper in the country in various sectors including auto and appliance makers show the three-month average reaching its highest level since early in 2017.

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