MethodologyContact usLogin
The SHFE base metals have mainly benefitted from the weaker dollar after US economic data released overnight disappointed.
The US headline and core consumer price indices (CPI) for April were both weaker than expected with growth of 0.2% and 0.1% respectively.
The weaker inflation risk boosted investor appetite for the metals, with the dollar slipping on the prospect that the weaker CPI reading is unlikely to increase the number of times the US Federal Reserve will raise interest rates this year.
The dollar has fallen considerably since its high of 93.42 on Wednesday – its highest reading since late December last year.
The index was down by 0.08% at 92.71 as at 10.55am Shanghai time, compared with a reading of 93.03 at roughly the same time on Thursday.
Copper prices were also likely buoyed an increase in cancelled warrants at London Metal Exchange warehouses on Thursday.
The most-traded July copper contract on the SHFE traded at 51,430 yuan ($8,092) per tonne as at 10.57 am Shanghai time, climbing 360 yuan per tonne from Thursday’s close. Around 168,000 lots of the contract have changed hands so far this morning.
“Another day of falling inventories also helped. Cancelled warrants (orders to remove metal from LME warehouses) rose by 3.1% yesterday, the first rise since April. This follows strong outflows from Asian warehouses over the past week,” ANZ Research noted on Friday. Base metals prices
Currency moves and data releases