Edmonton Journal

Nickel leaps to highest level in over two years

- THOMAS BIESHEUVEL

Nickel climbed to a two-year high and copper extended gains to the highest since September 2014 as bets on tighter markets, especially in top user China, buoyed metals after their longest run of weekly gains in a decade.

Nickel advanced as much as 2.9 per cent to US$12,380 a metric tonne on the London Metal Exchange, its highest since June 2015. Copper climbed as much as 1.3 per cent to US$6,924 a tonne. Most metals rose after the LME Index of six contracts capped an eight-week advance on Friday — one short of a record run in 2006.

Industrial metals have been lifted by sustained demand growth and restrained supply.

In China, environmen­tal inspection­s and planned anti-pollution curbs on steel and aluminum have also led to forecasts of shortages. Gains are also being fuelled by a weaker dollar and a super-charged steel market in China that’s steering sentiment for other commoditie­s.

“It certainly feels like there is a broad resetting of expectatio­ns that are driving the metals at the moment,” Daniel Hynes, senior commoditie­s strategist at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd., said by phone from Sydney. “I was in China last week and I got the very strong impression that the environmen­tal push is having a pretty profound impact, and that’s not something that’s going to fall away quickly.”

Nickel was up 1.7 per cent at US$12,245 by 16:53 p.m. on the LME, while copper gained 1.1 per cent to US$6,912. Tin and zinc also rose, while aluminum and lead fell.

Mining companies are gaining from the metals surge, with the Bloomberg World Mining Index of shares rising for an 11th day to the highest since September 2014. Glencore Plc and Anglo American Plc are trading near the highest since 2014.

Commerzban­k AG cautioned that the gains may be overdone. “Apart from the good sentiment indicators, however, prices continue to be driven to a large extent by speculatio­n,” Commerzban­k said. “Prices have become largely detached from the fundamenta­l data. In our opinion, the potential for and possible extent of a price correction are increasing every week.”

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