Thursday February 8, 9:24 PM
Copper under pressure, drags others lower
LONDON, Feb 8 (Reuters) - Copper prices fell by nearly 3
percent on Thursday, with waning interest from funds
overshadowing the market, but analysts believed demand for the
metal in coming months would underpin prices.
"The markets are under pressure," a London Metal Exchange
trader said.
Copper for delivery in three months was down 2.9
percent at $5,270 a tonne by midsession from Wednesday's $5,425.
Zinc dropped 6 percent at one point to touch $3,000
and was later indicated at $3,050/3,051 versus $3,190.
Copper prices have fallen 15 percent so far in 2007 and are
down almost 40 percent from May's record $8,800-a-tonne high.
Traders said many of the funds had or were about to leave
the base metals complex to return to their core activities such
as equities, bonds and currencies.
"The game has changed completely...base metals are no longer
the apple in the eye of the funds," the trader said.
Analyst Kevin Norrish at Barclays Capital said there had
been very substantial selling recently on behalf of Commodity
Trading Advisors (CTAs) with short positions at all-time highs.
"It is not as if they have left copper but they have
aggressively shortened it," Norrish said.
Copper fell to 10-month lows of $5,250 last Friday after the
Wall Street Journal reported that $1.5 billion hedge fund Red
Kite had lost 20 percent of its value.
"The latest sell-off follows January's slump and it mainly
appears to have been a kneejerk reaction to stories that a large
hedge fund may have got into trouble," Standard Bank said.
In its monthly report the investment bank added that "weaker
fundamentals had nothing to do with it".
The picture for copper was looking much improved, Standard
Bank said, seeing significant potential in the demand side of
the market in the coming months.
"The next move is likely to be consolidation at higher levels
followed by a more significant recovery," Standard Bank said.
Stocks of copper in LME warehouses fell 25 tonnes to
215,725 tonnes on Thursday. They have doubled in the past 12
months and are about eight times higher than in July 2005.
ALUMINIUM
Aluminium declined $32 to $2,625 and analysts said
the metal might weaken further.
"Given the rise in stocks since mid-December, it's not
surprising that prices have come under pressure. Perhaps we may
head down towards $2,550," analyst William Adams at
BaseMetals.com said.
LME aluminium stocks rose 3,275 tonnes to 755,825 tonnes on
Thursday. In the previous session some 8,000 call options at a
strike price of $3,000 expired without being exercised.
The premium over cash metal or backwardation eased to $86/88
from $114/116 ahead of the option expiry.
Zinc have fallen by some 26 percent this year.
Barclays' Norrish said zinc had dropped mostly on the back
of technical selling with sentiment influenced by a slowdown in
the rate of inventories withdrawal and Chinese exports.
Nickel was down $1,100 at $34,800, lead fell
to $1,535/1,536 against $1,560, whilst tin rose to
$11,850 against its last quote on Wednesday at $11,800/11,900.
World tin consumption rose by some 9 percent, preliminary
figures from tin organisation ITRI showed. [ID:nL07829919]
(Additional reporting by Atul Prakash)
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