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Markets bet Beijing is getting serious about China's overcapacity
Markets bet Beijing is getting serious about China's overcapacity

Reuters

time6 days ago

  • Business
  • Reuters

Markets bet Beijing is getting serious about China's overcapacity

BEIJING/HONG KONG, July 24 (Reuters) - Commodity prices from steel to polysilicon have surged this month as Chinese investors bet Beijing is finally serious about addressing overcapacity across the world's second-largest economy. Prices for nine industrial commodities including coal, steel, polysilicon, a building block for solar panels, alumina and lithium carbonate have climbed by 10% to 68% this month while share prices in steelmakers, solar panel manufacturers and clean energy companies have outpaced the benchmark CSI 300 Index. The moves coincide with Beijing's call on July 1 to tackle "disorderly price competition," or overcapacity, and an acknowledgement it intends to deal with a persistent problem fuelling deflation at home and trade barriers abroad. Since then, state media has amplified that message with warnings against involution, a now-popular reference to competition so fierce it becomes self-destructive. "I think that addressed a big concern for investors, which is the profit margin squeeze on some of the very promising sectors," said Tai Hui, Asia Pacific chief market strategist at JPMorgan Asset Management. Champions of the old economy including steel and coal and newer industries such as solar panels and electric vehicles are grappling with overcapacity and falling prices, which had previously prompted many warnings but little action. This month, some of the reactions from ministries, regulators and local governments suggest Beijing's signal is being received. Two days after a top-level policy meeting on July 1 called for action, the industry ministry pledged to curb price wars in the solar sector. China's photovoltaic industry index is up about 11% this month. (.CSI931151), opens new tab Polysilicon prices are up 68% after local media reported that the two biggest producers were preparing to buy up smaller rivals and consolidate the sector. Last week, a lithium miner in northwest China was temporarily shut for non-compliant mining, leading speculators to bet that more closures could follow. This week, prices for coking coal used to make steel rose to their daily limit for three consecutive sessions after the National Energy Administration ordered inspections at mines to check for excess production. To be sure, Beijing has pushed supply-side reforms before, most recently about a decade ago to cut production in the cement, steel, glass and coal industries. However, the task is more difficult this time due to higher levels of private ownership in many of these industries, misaligned incentives at the local and national levels, and limited options for other sectors to absorb lost jobs. It's unclear how far authorities are determined to go in curbing production and which other sectors they may target. China's leadership is sending a clear and positive signal about their commitment to address overcapacity, but progress is likely to be much slower this time around and it could take a year or two to see improvement in company profits, said Laura Wang, Chief China Equity Strategist for Morgan Stanley based in Hong Kong. "In the next three to six months, we are relatively conservative in terms of how much actual capacity shutdown you would be able to see," Wang said.

Copper Market in Turmoil as Trump Touts 50% Tariff on US Imports
Copper Market in Turmoil as Trump Touts 50% Tariff on US Imports

Bloomberg

time09-07-2025

  • Business
  • Bloomberg

Copper Market in Turmoil as Trump Touts 50% Tariff on US Imports

President Donald Trump sowed fresh chaos in metals markets by indicating the US would implement a higher-than-expected 50% tariff on copper imports, spurring a record spike in New York futures and a drop in the global benchmark. The plan, announced in an apparently off-the-cuff comment to reporters, marks the latest twist in a tumultuous period for industrial commodities, as the US leader aims to encourage more mining and smelting at home. He's already raised fees on steel and aluminum imports, while probes into flows of multiple other metals are in train.

Stock Movers: FCX, Starbucks, Merck
Stock Movers: FCX, Starbucks, Merck

Bloomberg

time09-07-2025

  • Business
  • Bloomberg

Stock Movers: FCX, Starbucks, Merck

On this episode of Stock Movers: - Freeport-McMoRan (FCX) is higher this morning as President Trump announced a 50% tariff on copper imports, causing a record spike in New York futures and a drop in the global benchmark. The plan, announced in an apparently off-the-cuff comment to reporters, marks the latest twist in a tumultuous period for industrial commodities, as the US leader aims to encourage more mining and smelting at home. He's already raised fees on steel and aluminum imports, while probes into flows of multiple other metals are in train. - Starbucks (SBUX) is gaining after it received proposals from prospective investors in its China business, with most eyeing a controlling stake in the operation, said people familiar with the matter. The company may consider selling a larger holding based on valuation and other factors, although its preferred option was to sell a minority stake to a partner, the people said. Starbucks said it sees "significant long-term potential in China" and wants to "retain a meaningful stake in the business", according to a statement. - Merck (MRK) shares are higher after it agreed to buy UK biotech Verona Pharma Plc for about $10 billion to offset the looming loss of exclusivity for its top-selling cancer drug. Shares of Verona Pharma (VRNA), for its part, are jumping on the news. - T-Mobile (TMUS) is lower this morning after getting a downgrade from KeyBanc. KeyBanc Capital Markets cut it to underweight from sector weight, saying the telecom company's stock underperformance is set to continue and that its 'premium valuation is just too high.'

Copper Market in Turmoil as Trump Touts 50% Tariff on US Imports
Copper Market in Turmoil as Trump Touts 50% Tariff on US Imports

Yahoo

time09-07-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Copper Market in Turmoil as Trump Touts 50% Tariff on US Imports

(Bloomberg) — President Donald Trump sowed fresh chaos in metals markets by indicating the US would implement a higher-than-expected 50% tariff on copper (HG=F) imports, spurring a record spike in New York futures and a drop in the global benchmark. Are Tourists Ruining Europe? How Locals Are Pushing Back Can Americans Just Stop Building New Highways? Singer Akon's Failed Futuristic City in Senegal Ends Up a $1 Billion Resort Denver City Hall Takes a Page From NASA Philadelphia Trash Piles Up as Garbage Workers' Strike Drags On The plan, announced in an apparently off-the-cuff comment to reporters, marks the latest twist in a tumultuous period for industrial commodities, as the US leader aims to encourage more mining and smelting at home. He's already raised fees on steel and aluminum imports, while probes into flows of multiple other metals are in train. Since February, when Trump first laid out plans for the levies, global traders have sent record volumes of the metal to the US, targeting huge profits on cargoes that can be delivered before the tariffs land. A 50% tariff — which could be in place within weeks — signals an imminent end to that trade but injects new uncertainties, including on timing and potential carve-outs for some large producers. In the short-term, one crucial question for traders is whether or not copper that's already on its way to the US will be hit with tariffs when it arrives. Citigroup Inc. called it a watershed moment for copper, closing the window for significant shipments into the US market. 'The degree of impact will heavily depend on the details,' said Marcus Garvey, Macquarie Group's head of commodities strategy. 'Not only the rate of any tariff but which forms of copper it is applied to, and whether or not there is any grace period ahead of its implementation.' If the tariff takes hold, it will inflict higher costs across a broad section of the US economy due to the myriad of industries and applications that rely on copper — even as Trump piles pressure on the Federal Reserve to lower interest rates. Trump's already imposed 50% levies on steel and aluminum (ALI=F), but there's particular concern about the economic impact of copper tariffs because the US is highly reliant on imports. US buyers have already warned that the measure risks undermining Trump's core ambitions to revive manufacturing and challenge China's industrial might. 'The US does not have nearly enough mine/smelter/refinery capacity to be self-sufficient in copper,' Jefferies LLC analysts including Christopher LaFemina wrote in a note. 'As a result, import tariffs are likely to lead to continued significant price premiums in the US relative to other regions.' Contracts on the Comex surged to an unprecedented 25% premium over London Metal Exchange prices — the global benchmark — in the aftermath of Trump's comments, a level that also suggests the market is not fully convinced that a 50% levy will be imposed universally. A single carve-out for a top supplier like Chile would materially dampen the blow for importers, and manufacturers now have huge buffer stocks to fall back on thanks to the record-breaking imports seen over recent months. Copper climbed as much as 17% in New York on Tuesday, a record one-day spike to an all-time high, before falling more than 4% in early trading on Wednesday. On the LME, the metal slid as much as 2.4% at the open, before easing to change hands at $9,608.50 a ton, 1.9% lower, at 9:51 a.m. local time. 'The tariff increase is a bearish factor for LME copper prices in the near term,' said Yongcheng Zhao, principal analyst of the China copper market at Benchmark Mineral Intelligence. 'We expect continued volatility until the tariff officially kicks in, followed by the potential for a sharp decline.' Trump's 50% pledge comes as copper demand is expected to surge over the coming decade, with data centers, automakers, power companies and others scouring the globe for feedstock. Retooling power and transportation systems to run on renewable energy will require far more copper than the companies that produce it are currently committed to deliver. The path toward greater US self-reliance in copper is a fraught one for the US given the paucity of existing capacity and the challenges in building new plants. Net copper imports account for 36% of demand, according to Morgan Stanley research. 'The longer term aim of the Trump administration may be for the US to be fully self-sufficient in copper, but mines take too long to develop for this to be achieved in less than a 10-year time horizon,' Jefferies analysts wrote. 'The US will still rely on foreign mines to meet demand for the foreseeable future.' A shorter-term solution would be for the US to boost production from copper scrap, which has historically been shipped to processors overseas, particularly in China. Those flows ground to a halt as the spike in Comex prices made US scrap more expensive, but for now the country lacks the smelting capacity to fully work through the backlog of scrap that's been piling up. Major players in the US copper industry have called on President Trump to restrict exports of ore and scrap instead of imposing tariffs on imports. They've also warned that putting tariffs solely on refined copper could lead to a flood of imports of value-added copper products that aren't subject to the levies. Elaborating on Trump's copper comments, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick later said the levy would be in place in late July or by Aug. 1. There were no details, including on which particular products would be hit by the tariff rate, or whether there could be exemptions for large producers like Chile. Many analysts and traders had been expecting tariffs at the relatively lower level of 25%, and the higher threshold means those carve-outs become more important. The massive flow of copper to the US this year also means the market there is relatively well-supplied for now. 'A 50% tariff is arguably comparatively bearish,' Macquarie's Garvey said. 'It would be more demand destructive at the margin in the US and extends the period of working down excess inventory.' The global copper industry has been bracing for the levies since February, when Trump ordered the Commerce Department to lay out the case for imposing them on national-security grounds as part of a review under Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act. It had until later in the year to complete the investigation. —With assistance from Alfred Cang. 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Trump Roils Copper Markets With Latest Tariff Threat
Trump Roils Copper Markets With Latest Tariff Threat

Bloomberg

time09-07-2025

  • Business
  • Bloomberg

Trump Roils Copper Markets With Latest Tariff Threat

It was another day of reacting to Donald Trump's latest remarks. The president sowed chaos in metals markets by indicating the US would implement a higher-than-expected 50% tariff on copper imports, spurring a record spike in New York futures and a drop in the global benchmark. The plan, announced in an apparently off-the-cuff comment to reporters, marks the latest twist in a tumultuous period for industrial commodities, as Trump aims to encourage more mining and smelting at home. He's already raised fees on steel and aluminum imports, while probes into flows of multiple other metals are in train. This adds to the strong-arm messaging that's already dominated newsflow this week. Trump has vowed to push forward with his aggressive tariff regime in the coming days, stressing he would not offer additional extensions on country-specific levies set to now hit in early August. The posturing on social media and at a Cabinet meeting on Tuesday came after traders initially shrugged off a series of letters and executive actions Trump issued Monday, pushing back the deadline for his so-called 'reciprocal' tariffs while announcing the latest rates he planned for more than a dozen countries. — Stephanie Phang

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