OpinionPREMIUM

ANDY HOME: Copper squeezed in the US, but China has plenty

Weak spot demand, robust imports and rising domestic output have kept China’s exchange inventories high

Copper 360 has successfully executed the first on-ore blast at Rietberg Mine in the Northern Cape.  File photo: ELISEO FERNANDEZ/REUTERS
Copper 360 has successfully executed the first on-ore blast at Rietberg Mine in the Northern Cape. File photo: ELISEO FERNANDEZ/REUTERS (, ELISEO FERNANDEZ/REUTERS)

London — The London Metal Exchange (LME) copper price hit a record nominal high of $11,104.50 per tonne on Monday.

The London market is playing catch-up with its US peer CME Group, where a vicious short squeeze has been playing out on the Comex contract.

Traders are now scrambling to ship metal to CME warehouses in the US to cover short positions.

The panic has added fuel to a rally that has driven the copper price up by 27% since January and reinforced a bull narrative of a market caught between constrained supply and green demand boom.

However, not everyone is short of copper. China, the world’s largest buyer, has plenty of the stuff.

This doesn’t offer much relief for those short of the CME contract, at least directly, but it’s a useful reminder the world hasn’t run out of copper just yet.

Strong seasonal surge

Inventory registered with the Shanghai Futures Exchange (ShFE) stood at 291,020 tonnes at the end of last week, compared with LME stocks of 105,900 tonnes and CME stocks of just 18,244 tonnes.

This year brought the usual seasonal stocks surge around the lunar new year holidays but it’s been the strongest since 2020, a year of Covid-19 disruption.

Headline ShFE inventory peaked at 300,045 tonnes in the middle of April and has stayed around those elevated heights, the usual post-holiday drawdown so far conspicuous by its absence.

There are another 45,000 tonnes of bonded copper registered with ShFE’s international branch, the International Energy Exchange.

The build in Chinese exchange stocks lifted global exchange inventory to 491,000 tonnes at the end of March, the highest monthly level since August 2021.

Stuttering demand

Weak spot demand, robust imports and rising domestic output have combined to keep China’s exchange inventories high.

Chinese buyers, like those everywhere else, have reacted to copper’s sharp rally by destocking, which is probably why the seasonal post-holiday decline in ShFE stocks hasn’t yet kicked in.

Meanwhile, Chinese imports of refined metal have been running at a healthy clip since the middle of 2023. Imports accelerated from 1.65-million tonnes in the first half of 2023 to 2.07-million in the second half.

The pace dropped only slightly in the first four months of 2024 with cumulative imports of 1.25-million tonnes up by 17% on the same period of 2023.

Net imports of 1.18-million tonnes were up by a sharper 26% on the year-earlier period reflecting lower exports, which fell to 70,400 tonnes from 129,000.

Significantly, imports of raw material have also been rising in 2024.

Inbound volumes of copper concentrate rose by 7% year on year to 9.34- million tonnes in January-April, Chinese players evidently adjusting to the loss of the Cobre Panama mine after its closure at the end of 2023.

Higher copper concentrates availability has translated into higher domestic production of refined copper. After rising by 8% in the first quarter of the year, output growth accelerated to 9% in April.

A March agreement by Chinese smelters to curtail output due to uneconomic treatment terms was one of the triggers for copper’s supercharged rally but any impact on the country’s production rate is so far hard to discern.

Import premium collapse

The combination of elevated stocks and super-high prices has caused a collapse in the Yangshan premium, a closely tracked indicator of China’s copper import appetite.

The premium is now assessed by local data provider Shanghai Metal Markets at minus $5 per tonne, the first time it has fallen into negative territory since the data series was launched in 2013.

The spot import door has just firmly closed. Metal will still flow into China under annual supply deals, which tend to be favoured by larger buyers, but arrivals are likely to drop a couple of gears relative to the past few months.

This may allow CME shorts some flex in rerouting shipments of South American copper from China to US ports.

CME’s list of deliverable brands doesn’t include either Russian or Chinese brands, limiting the potential for a straight stocks transfer from the LME, where they accounted for two-thirds of warranted inventory at the end of April.

China clearly won’t miss the extra import units in the short term as the price spike suppresses buying at every stage of the product manufacturing chain.

Disconnect

This copper rally has been driven by fund buyers and accentuated by trade short position holders being forced to cover.

Investors are still arriving at the bull party. Money managers have lifted their outright long positions on the CME contract to a near six-year high of 141,204 contracts.

Investment fund long positions on the LME have also flexed wider over the last week to 107,385 lots, the most bullish positioning since the LME launched its Commitments of Traders Report in 2018.

It takes two to tango in a bull market and it's the CME shorts that are also contributing to the upside momentum.

However, assuming traders can shift copper to CME warehouses and rebuild depleted stocks, the current disconnect between CME and LME pricing will be closed.

That will leave the far larger disconnect between price and supply chain reality.

Can copper keep rising if the world’s largest physical consumer stops buying? And if China won’t pay these prices, who else will?

Reuters

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