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A pick-up in buying activity for stainless steel products has given some lift to nickel prices after they dipped below $11,000 per tonne earlier this week.
Aluminium prices continued to strengthen this morning, hitting a high of $2,182.50 per tonne, the highest since January 3, 2013. LME stocks continue to fall and a further 14,200 tonnes were freshly cancelled today, taking the total amount of cancelled aluminium this week to 41,000 tonnes.
“Investors [are] becoming increasingly confident that recent curbs on Chinese [aluminium] capacity are having an impact,” ANZ Research said.
“This has seen inventories continue to be drawn down. LME stockpiles are down 41% this year, with August levels hitting a nine-year low,” the bank added.
Lead and zinc prices also continue to bounce higher with lead prices finding support from supply tightness amid continuing environmental inspections in China.
“The environmental inspections have driven many miners to suspend production and undergo maintenance, which has tightened the supply of zinc and lead in the last two months,” a Shanghai-based trader said.
Copper continues to bounce back
Base metals up
Currency moves and data releases