Copper set to drop as China’s Jiangxi looks to boost output

FILE PHOTO -  Sheets of copper cathode are seen at the copper cathode plant inside La Escondida, the world's biggest copper mine, near Antofagasta, Chile March 31, 2008. REUTERS/Ivan Alvarado/File Photo

 

Bloomberg

Copper is poised to drop this year as higher US interest rates and elections in Europe curb demand, according to the chairman of China’s second-largest refiner of the metal. Prices will end the year lower than where they started, Jiangxi Copper Co. Chairman Li Baomin said in an interview in Beijing as the government announced growth plans for 2017. Jiangxi Copper plans to increase production to the maximum capacity of 1.36 million metric tons, compared with about 1.2 million tons last year, he said.
Copper got a lift in November on speculation that US President Donald Trump will increase spending on roads, bridges and airports, expanding demand for metals. After a surge in January, copper has slipped on mounting expectations that the US central bank will raise interest rates again just three months after a quarter percentage point increase.
“There are things worrying us,” Li said, including Trump’s “not clear” policies, higher US rates and uncertai-
nties about who will win European elections. “In addition, some emerging economies’ development is losing momentum.” Copper will average 45,000 ($6,524) to 46,000 yuan a ton in 2017, Li said. That’s lower than the year-to-date average of 47,513 yuan. Futures in Shanghai traded at 48,220 yuan at 9:04 a.m. local time on Monday.
Global demand still looks set to exceed production, with China’s consumption growth at 6 percent this year compared with 5.8 percent last year, Li said.
Demand is getting a boost from power grid spending and a push toward more energy-efficient vehicles that use copper, he said.

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