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The most-traded March copper contract on the SHFE stood at 54,730 yuan ($8,422) per tonne as of 10.55am Shanghai time, up by 40 yuan from the previous session’s close.
Concerns over constrained supply stemming from tightening regulations in China over imported scrap and looming labor negotiations at mines have provided some support for light metal prices this morning.
The Chinese government has finished issuing the first two rounds of solid waste import licenses for 2018, with copper scrap import license numbers and tonnages both more than 94% lower.
China’s Ministry of Environmental Protection issued new regulations in mid-December 2017 that only end-users in the business of processing solid waste will be allowed to apply for import licenses for scrap listed as “restricted imports”.
The new regulations are expected to prevent a number of Chinese market participants from acquiring imported copper scrap due to the limited number of licenses granted, with some noting that the uncertainty surrounding how strictly regulators will carry out these new rules has left them adopting a wait-and-see approach rather than applying for an import license.
Meanwhile, labor negotiations at several of the world’s leading copper mines are expected to increase supply risk this year and could provide support to prices, according to market analysts.
More than 30 labor contracts are due to be renegotiated next year – the largest number since 2010.
Yet a firmer dollar and lack of significant data releases has left the market on the lookout for further direction, stifling any substantial gains in the base metals complex.
The dollar index was at 92.23 as of 10.15am Shanghai time, compared with a reading of 92.05 at roughly the same time on Monday.
Base metals flat to firmer; tin declines
Currency moves and data releases