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“On the LME, markets remained nervous and conditions were still choppy. Price activity saw a tentative rebound through the morning session and buying on the US open but the move lacked momentum and largely faltered through the afternoon as the USD gained,” Sucden Financial noted.
Copper prices fell $36 per tonne at the close despite rebounding to highs of $6,813.50 per tonne earlier in the day.
“Base metals managed to erase a good part of their declines [on Wednesday] to finish unchanged to slightly higher, but the complex is certainly a shadow of its former self, unable to stage the post-sell-off rebounds that were readily prevalent for much of the last few months,” INTL FCStone analyst Edward Meir said.
“Prices ignored a weaker dollar [on Wednesday] and are still trading mostly on China-related variables, with the release of Monday’s macro-reports casting a long shadow and being the dominant restraining force,” Meir added.
Nickel also continued to suffer falling a further $320 per tonne – the metal has been correcting ever since it hit $13,000 per tonne after a ‘rollercoaster’ two weeks.
Lead and zinc followed the complex lower as traders say they are awaiting direction.
“There is little to move the prices higher at the moment, so things are in a bit of a slump,” one trader said.
Aluminium dipped $4 per tonne at the close but remained stable throughout the day – its declines are capped by support of capacity cuts in China which are set to be in place for the next few months.
The only metal to buck the downward trend was tin, edging $10 per tonne higher despite stocks at LME listed warehouses increasing 5% over the last two days.
Base metals prices
Currency moves and data releases