Copper price fell on Friday, hit by profit-taking and risk-off sentiment
in wider financial markets on worries about surging inflation.
Copper for delivery in March retreated on the Comex market in New York,
touching $4.5080 per pound ($9,917 per tonne), down 3.2% compared to Thursday’s
closing.
Global stock markets fell after US consumer prices showed the biggest
annual increase in 40 years, which is expected to prompt tighter monetary
policy from the US Federal Reserve.
“Today it’s really risk-off sentiment in financial markets and the
dollar is up based on yesterday’s CPI. There’s also likely some profit-taking
after the run-up we’ve seen,” said Julius Baer analyst Carsten Menke.
“In terms of the bigger picture, there’s a general
cooling of the economy in China. Infrastructure and property are both key in
terms of driving metals demand and we do not expect a quick reversal in either."
Menke forecasts LME copper to ease to $9,500 a tonne in three months and
to $8,750 in 12 months.
The Yangshan copper premium, an indication of physical demand in China,
slid to $38 a tonne on Friday, the weakest since July last year and down from
$102 two months ago.
Goldman Sachs believes the copper market has just two years of primary
production growth left.
In this week’s report, Goldman reiterated its bullish forecast for
copper to average $11,875 a tonne ($5.40/lbs) in 2021, rising steadily to
$15,000 ($6.80/lbs) during 2025.
By Reuters
Source: www.mining.com/copper-price-retreats-on-risk-off-sentiment-profit-taking/