EUROPEAN MORNING BRIEF 04/01: SHFE Copper in tight range; Chinese government policy’s sway on coking coal market; Indonesia to see greater domestic nickel consumption

Good morning from Metal Bulletin’s offices in Asia, bringing the key news and market stories on Thursday January 4.

Copper was trading in a tight range during Asian trading hours on Thursday January 4 amid mixed market sentiment following the release of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) minutes overnight.

Check Metal Bulletin’s live futures report here.

LME snapshot at 0240 London time

Latest 3M  LME Prices

 

Price ($/t)

 Change since yesterday’s close ($)

Copper

7170.5

-4

Aluminium

2217.5

-12

Lead

2555

-22

Zinc

3325

-5

Tin

19885

-50

Nickel

12410

-40

SHFE snapshot at 0240 Shanghai time

Most traded SHFE contracts

 

Price (yuan/t)

 Change since yesterday’s close (yuan)

Copper (Feb)

54800

-50

Aluminium (Feb)

14975

-90

Zinc (Feb)

25800

25

Lead (Feb)

19315

5

Tin (May)

145040

-10

Nickel (May)

97820

-800

Chinese government policies, especially those limiting pollution, will continue to be a factor affecting coking coal prices in 2018.

Heavy Chinese investment in Indonesian nickel smelting and stainless steel production means that an increasing quantity of nickel ore mined in the country will be consumed internally from 2018 onwards.

Brazilian flat steel producer CSN has applied an increase of 23% in its annual pricing contracts to local automakers, effective Monday January 1, the company confirmed to Metal Bulletin on January 3.

$20-per-tonne increase in US ferrous scrap export prices prior to the holidays is heating up the market just as frigid weather conditions begin to trigger collection concerns among Northeastern market participants.

Most global nickel premiums were flat, while new Chinese import duties pushed free-trade briquettes to China from Australia to a historic high.