Copper dips on concerns over rising Omicron cases, firm dollar

20 Dec, 2021

Copper prices fell on Monday, as a rapid spread of the Omicron coronavirus variant fuelled concerns over its impact on economic activity, while the dollar held firm.

Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange fell 0.5% to $9,390 a tonne, as of 0450 GMT, while the most-traded January copper contract on the Shanghai Futures Exchange shed 0.6% to 68,870 yuan ($10,798.06) a tonne.

"Recent news from few countries on Omicron cases are bringing caution to market. Risks include further lockdowns on spread of Omicron and how it impacts demand or production operations," said Wong Min Hao, a commodities manager with Phillip Futures.

The Netherlands went into a lockdown on Sunday, while several other European governments considered additional curbs to control the spread of the highly contagious variant.

The dollar hovered near the three-week peak hit last week, after a US Federal Reserve official signalled that the first interest rate hike could come as early as March.

A stronger dollar makes the greenback-denominated commodity more expensive for those holding other currencies.

Among other industrial metals, LME aluminium fell 0.5% to $2,710 a tonne, nickel dropped 0.7% to $19,510 a tonne, lead was down 1.7% at $2,268.5 a tonne and tin eased 0.4% to $38,275 a tonne.

Fundamentals

On-warrant LME-registered copper stocks eased to 80,550 tonnes, while the premium for LME cash copper over the three-month contract was at $30 a tonne, highest in two weeks.

Inventories in Shanghai Futures Exchange warehouses fell to 34,580 tonnes last week, its lowest level since June 2009.

ShFE aluminium gained 1% to 19,680 yuan a tonne, nickel rose 0.4% to 145,090 yuan a tonne, lead fell 1.9% to 15,360 yuan a tonne and tin was 0.7% lower at 282,540 yuan a tonne.

China's aluminium imports have hit an annual record high this year with a month to spare, customs data showed on Saturday, as restrictions on power usage by domestic smelters underpin demand for overseas metal.

China's output of alumina, which is smelted to make aluminium, fell in November by 4.5% year-on-year to its lowest in 18 months, official data showed on Friday, as regions impose curbs on the aluminium raw material, while production of both lead and zinc was the highest since December last year.

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