logo
Copper sags as worries subside about disruptions, inventories rise

Copper sags as worries subside about disruptions, inventories rise

Zawya16-07-2025
Copper prices slipped on Wednesday as concern eased about supply disruptions and inventories continued rising amid uncertainty about the impact of U.S. tariffs.
Benchmark three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange traded 0.3% lower at $9,615 per metric ton in official rings, down from a three-month peak just over $10,000 touched on July 2.
"There hasn't been any additional supply disruptions to push prices higher across the various exchanges," said Nitesh Shah, commodity strategist at WisdomTree.
Protesters have lifted blockades in Peru, the world's third biggest copper producer, that blocked a major copper transit route for more than two weeks, one of the protest leaders told Reuters late on Tuesday.
Meanwhile, Rio Tinto on Wednesday posted 9% higher quarterly copper output and forecast full-year production at the higher end of its guidance range, while Antofagasta reported an 11% jump in copper production in the first half.
At the same time, a flow of copper to the U.S. by traders anticipating tariffs has tapered off following the announcement that 50% duties would be imposed on August 1.
"The inventory drain from the LME and Shanghai has plateaued and almost reversed. You're starting to see a build-up in both locations," Shah added.
LME copper stocks gained by another 10,525 tons, data showed on Wednesday, having jumped by a third over the past 2-1/2 weeks.
U.S. Comex copper futures dropped 0.9% to $5.53 a lb, bringing the premium of Comex over LME copper to $2,579 a ton.
Investors were also digesting data on Tuesday showing China's economy slowed less than expected in the second quarter.
"The GDP print, hitting slightly above target, takes away the need for additional stimulus, and that may potentially constrain copper prices," Shah said.
The most-traded copper contract on the Shanghai Futures Exchange added 0.1% to 77,980 yuan ($10,865.11) a ton.
Among other metals, LME aluminium fell 0.6% to $2,566 a ton, nickel lost 1% to $14,995, zinc shed 0.4% to $2,686, lead eased 0.7% to $1,982.50 and tin slipped 1.5% to $32,825.
($1 = 7.1771 Chinese yuan)
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

SharpLink buys $295M in ETH — more than all the Ether issued last month
SharpLink buys $295M in ETH — more than all the Ether issued last month

Crypto Insight

time14 minutes ago

  • Crypto Insight

SharpLink buys $295M in ETH — more than all the Ether issued last month

SharpLink Gaming, the second-largest corporate holder of Ether, has acquired another 77,210 Ether, worth $295 million, as the firm shows no signs of slowing down its crypto treasury play. The single purchase is more than the network's net issuance of Ether in the past 30 days, which stood at 72,795 ETH, according to Ultra Sound Money. The company staked most of the acquired ETH to earn staking rewards. After the recent acquisition of ETH, the company's total ETH holdings exceed 438,000 ETH, which is worth more than $1.69 billion, according to Lookonchain. SharpLink is the second company to hold more than $1.5 billion worth of ETH in its treasury, with Bitmine Immersion Tech taking the top spot as its ETH holdings exceed $2 billion. 'Banks close on weekends. Ethereum runs 24/7,' the firm said in a X post on Sunday. On July 18, Cointelegraph reported that SharpLink has filed an amended prospectus with the regulators in a bid to increase its stock sale from $1 billion to $6 billion. The majority of the proceeds from the sale will be used to buy ETH. Talent acquisition spree On Friday, SharpLink announced that it had hired Joseph Chalom as its new co-CEO. Chalom had worked for 20 years at BlackRock, the largest asset management firm in the world. At SharpLink, he will be responsible for shaping and executing the company's global strategy. In May, the company nominated Consensys CEO Joseph Lubin as its chairman of its board of directors. Ether supply shock ETH purchases by corporations and institutional investors via ETFs can create a supply shortage for ETH, which can theoretically push the price. On Thursday, BitMine Immersion Technologies stated that it held more than 566,000 ETH, worth more than $2 billion at time of publication. Additionally, the firm announced its ambitious plan of holding at least 5% of ETH's total supply, which amounts to 6 million Ether worth more than $23 billion at the time of writing. Currently, 6.73% of ETH's total supply, 8.12 million Ether worth more than $31 billion, is collectively being held by corporations and ETFs combined, according to Strategic ETH Reserve. Source:

Africa's Lithium Market Expansion Ahead of African Mining Week (AMW) 2025
Africa's Lithium Market Expansion Ahead of African Mining Week (AMW) 2025

Zawya

time14 minutes ago

  • Zawya

Africa's Lithium Market Expansion Ahead of African Mining Week (AMW) 2025

Africa's lithium industry is gaining strong momentum in 2025, marked by new project launches, significant discoveries, increased capital inflows and progress in local value addition. In a major milestone for downstream development, Zimbabwe's Verify Engineering announced in July the successful production of the country's first locally manufactured lithium-ion battery. The development aligns with Zimbabwe's national strategy to ban unprocessed lithium exports by 2027 – a move aimed at driving beneficiation, enhancing domestic industrial capacity and positioning the country as a competitive player in the global battery value chain. These advancements lay the foundation for the upcoming African Mining Week (AMW) 2025 – Africa's premier gathering for mining stakeholders – which will spotlight emerging opportunities across the continent's lithium value chain. AMW serves as a premier platform for exploring the full spectrum of mining opportunities across Africa. The event is held alongside the African Energy Week: Invest in African Energies 2025 conference from October 1-3 in Cape Town. Sponsors, exhibitors and delegates can learn more by contacting sales@ New Discoveries As the official platform for advancing Africa's mining prospects, AMW 2025 will provide global stakeholders with key updates on the continent's latest lithium discoveries and project developments. Among these, UK-based Aterian and global major Rio Tinto announced Rwanda's first lithium find at the HCK Lithium Project in July 2025 – marking a pivotal milestone in the country's mining sector. Meanwhile, in Ivory Coast, Atlantic Lithium reported the discovery of spodumene-bearing pegmatites at its Agboville and Rubino licenses in March 2025. The find comes as the company progresses its flagship Ewoyaa Lithium Project in Ghana, set to become the country's first industrial-scale lithium operation. First Production Milestones AMW 2025 will also spotlight Africa's growing lithium production capacity and its rising contribution to the global battery mineral supply chain, as several first-production milestones are achieved across the continent. In July, Premier African Minerals commenced operations at its Zulu Lithium Plant in Zimbabwe, reinforcing the country's role as a leading global lithium producer. Earlier in February, UK-based Kodal Minerals began spodumene concentrate production at its Boungouni Project in Mali, targeting a steady monthly output of 10,000 tons, primarily destined for export to China. Meanwhile, Mali's Goulamina Project – operated by China's Ganfeng Lithium – achieved first production in January, with Phase 1 capacity reaching 506,000 tons, positioning the site among the largest lithium operations worldwide. New Financing Unlocking Africa's Potential AMW will also showcase financing deals and innovative mechanisms accelerating the growth of the lithium sector. In July, Canada's Lithium Africa raised over C$3.4 million through a private placement to fund exploration and development projects across Morocco, the Ivory Coast, Guinea, Mali and Zimbabwe. That same month, Nigeria's Continental Lithium expanded its working capital through a strategic merger with Chariot Corporation to support its hard rock lithium assets in Oyo and Kwara states. Meanwhile, in May, U.S. startup KoBold Metals pledged $1 billion to develop the Manono Lithium Project in the Democratic Republic of Congo, following its acquisition of project operator AVZ Minerals. As Africa rapidly positions itself as a major hub for lithium production, AMW serves as the focal point for industry dialogue. The event will spotlight investment-ready opportunities and facilitate deal-making between African stakeholders and global financiers, advancing the continent's ambitions in the lithium space. Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Energy Capital&Power.

Exporters increasingly find 'alternative markets' ahead of Aug 1 tariff deadline
Exporters increasingly find 'alternative markets' ahead of Aug 1 tariff deadline

The National

timean hour ago

  • The National

Exporters increasingly find 'alternative markets' ahead of Aug 1 tariff deadline

With US tariffs climbing – particularly on politically sensitive goods like steel, electric vehicles and pharmaceuticals – some firms have begun rerouting exports to more predictable, lower-tariff markets, though not yet at scale. The question now is how widespread it will become, and at what economic cost. India offers an early example. The Asian subcontinent is facing tariffs of up to 26 per cent – among the steepest imposed on any major economy – on goods coming into the US under President Donald Trump 's Liberation Day levies. India's $32 billion jewellery and gems industry is looking to alternative markets, especially the Middle East. That shift will be on show at Sajex 2025, a jewellery trade fair set for September in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. Backed by the Indian government and industry bodies, the event is part of a broader push to establish the Middle East as a long-term market for Indian exports. India, a global leader in diamond processing and jewellery manufacturing, regards Saudi Arabia as a big growth opportunity, especially as trade tensions with the US resurface. The kingdom's jewellery market was estimated at $4.6 billion in 2024 and is expected to grow strongly through 2030. Tariff push For many countries, US tariff increases under the current administration have remained modest so far, typically around 10 per cent, whereas two dozen or so face substantially higher levies. So, the impact of tariffs is concentrated but weighty. For now, many exporters are coping with this by stomaching a squeeze in their margins, negotiating lower prices with suppliers, or taking advantage of weaker domestic currencies, which help to offset some of the added cost. But if tariffs rise permanently to above 10 per cent to15 per cent, it will lead to economics shifting in many industries. At that point, rethinking where and how to export becomes unavoidable. China, which had faced tariffs as high as 145 per cent on some goods entering the US, responded by accelerating shipments ahead of tariff deadlines and redirecting exports to other markets. That redirection has been greatest to those economies with a free trade agreement with China, or where import penetration was below average. The Trump administration announced new levies in April but delayed implementation twice – first to July, then again to August – prompting a rush to beat the clock. Some of those duties have since been eased under a temporary trade truce agreed between Washington and Beijing in London. Another meeting is set to take place soon in Stockholm. Still, Chinese exports to the US fell 10.9 per cent year-on-year in dollar terms during the first half of the year. Over the same period, exports to Asean countries – some of which Washington claims are being used to reroute Chinese goods and bypass tariffs – rose 13 per cent. In June alone, total Chinese exports rose 5.8 per cent in dollar terms, driven in part by firms racing to move goods before tariffs take effect in August. The surge offered a short-term lift to China's economy, which has leaned heavily on exports to compensate for weak domestic demand amid a prolonged property sector downturn. China-EU shift? While concerns persist over a wave of redirected Chinese goods entering Europe and other industrialised markets, there is little clear evidence of such a shift – at least not yet. Much of the excess appears to be heading into emerging economies, where trade oversight tends to be lighter and price remains a bigger factor in purchasing decisions. In China's case, the worry extends beyond volume. Some believe that redirected exports are state-subsidised, fuelling fears in places like the EU that competition is being distorted long before goods cross any borders. Meanwhile, on Sunday, a new trade deal was reached between the US and the EU with a 15 per tariff on most EU goods to the US, including pharmaceuticals, automobiles and semiconductors, averting a transatlantic trade war. Tariffs on metals remain unchanged. For now, changes in global trade flows are limited. One reason is that for heavily regulated or very complex products, like medical devices or automotive parts, redirecting exports tends to require compliance with new safety and certification standards. That can be time consuming and costly. Also, shifting factories across borders does not happen overnight. The semiconductor industry offers a good example. Two years ago, Taiwan's TSMC, one of the world's largest chip makers, said it planned to build a new €10 billion semiconductor plant in Germany. However, the factory is not expected to be up and running until 2027. For exporters, such delays can affect revenue. For importers, higher tariffs usually lead to higher consumer prices. In the US, this is already happening, with inflation rising to 2.7 per cent in June, ahead of forecasts, and core inflation increasing to 2.9 per cent. US retail stalwart Walmart, which imports heavily from China and Mexico, has warned that even a partial rollback of US tariffs leaves them too high to absorb. The last US-China trade war, launched in 2018, saw nearly all tariff costs passed through to American firms and consumers. History seems to be repeating itself. Macroeconomic data points to the broader fallout. A surge in imports, driven by pre-tariff stockpiling, helped drag the US economy into a 0.2 per cent annualised contraction in the first quarter of the year, the first such decline since 2022. General Motors is a case study in tariff exposure. With plants in Mexico, South Korea and Canada, the US car maker absorbed $1.1 billion in tariff costs in the second quarter, wiping out nearly a third of its adjusted profits. For now, many executives I teach at IMD are still in wait-and-see mode. Some companies are now delaying production shifts until 2026. Many cite advice to front-load exports before each tariff deadline. That has tactic worked so far. But with another deadline looming on August 1, the space for temporary fixes is closing. The deeper lesson of this moment is that volatility in trade policy is corrosive. As World Trade Organisation modelling suggests, if global tariffs rise and countries retaliate against the US, trade growth could reverse – falling from a projected 2.7 per cent gain this year to a decline of 0.5 per cent. In a world already navigating inflation, instability and slowing demand, few economies can afford another self-inflicted slowdown.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store