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“[United States President Donald Trump] indicated he was against using the harshest measures to curb Chinese investments. This appears to have been the trigger for a rally across the base metals sector,” ANZ Research noted on Thursday.
Lead was the outperformer in the morning session with its most-traded August contract on the SHFE rebounding to 21,270 yuan ($3,222) per tonne as at 10.30am Shanghai time, up 510 yuan per tonne or 2.5% from Wednesday’s close.
“The price [of lead] was strongly underpinned by robust demand from the battery sector and the recent output constraints at the major manufacturing base of [China’s] Henan province due to environmental inspections there,” an analyst based in Shanghai said.
Nickel was the second best performer this morning, with the metal’s most-traded September nickel contract on the SHFE climbing 1.7% as at 10.30am Shanghai time.
Despite easing supply-side concerns with 23 mines in the Philippines passing a review to check compliance with state regulations, nickel continues to benefit from declines in exchange inventories and the expectation of greater demand in line with the development of the electric vehicle sector.
In the other metals, zinc rose by 1% and copper increased by 0.4%, while tin and aluminium were the laggards with declines of 0.3% and 0.1% respectively.
Base metals prices
Currency moves and data releases