Iron ore broke through $80 a tonne for the first time in more than two years this week before paring gains as Asian steel mills and traders scrambled to secure more of the steelmaking ingredient.
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Wednesday, 30 November 2016
Iron ore’s dollar ride wrongfoots markets and buoys miners
China’s Ball of Money Is Rolling Back to Commodities
In China, money flow is tightly controlled and capital markets are relatively underdeveloped, meaning the economy works like squeezing a balloon.
The World Is Feeling the Might of China’s Commodity Traders
The Chinese speculators shaking up global commodity markets are switched-on, flush with cash and probably not getting enough sleep.
Monday, 28 November 2016
Tata agrees £100m specialty steel sale to Liberty House
Tata Steel has entered into exclusive negotiations to sell its specialty UK steel business for £100m to Liberty House, the metals group controlled by Indian-born commodities tycoon Sanjeev Gupta.
Zinc Rises to Highest Since 2007 as Metals Rally on China Demand
Zinc for delivery in three months rose 2.9 percent to settle at $2,900 a metric ton at 5:50 p.m. on the London Metal Exchange, after touching $2,985, the highest since October 2007
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Sunday, 6 November 2016
Gold Holds Near 1-Month High as Trump Angst Meets Rate Concerns
Gold held near a one-month high as investors weighed the need for a haven before next week’s American presidential election against expectations of higher U.S. interest rates.
The metal was little changed on
Friday, after climbing the previous six days as the dollar weakened and opinion polls
showed a dwindling lead for Hillary Clinton over Donald Trump. Bullion is set
for a third weekly gain, the longest run since early July, when investors
sought a haven following the U.K.’s vote to leave the European Union.
Investors are seeking to navigate
the crosscurrents thrown up by Tuesday’s vote -- with a possible victory for
Trump seen lifting gold to as high as $1,400 an ounce, Citigroup Inc. said. At
the same time, traders are becoming more certain
the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates next month as the economy
improves. Higher borrowing costs curb the appeal of owning assets that don’t
provide a yield, such as gold.
“Election fears and a weaker
dollar was what helped push gold back above $1,300 this week,” Jens
Pedersen, a Danske Bank A/S analyst in Copenhagen, said by phone. “At the same
time, the market is looking for a rate hike later this year, though we think
the Fed will wait until March.”
Gold for immediate delivery lost
0.1 percent to $1,301.76 an ounce by 10:51 a.m. in London, according to
Bloomberg generic pricing. It’s up 2.1 percent this week, the most since
September.
U.S. jobs data later today may
give more clues on the timing of interest-rate increases. Fed officials said
this week they need only “some” further evidence that employment and inflation
are on track toward their goals in order to hike, after leaving rates unchanged
for the seventh consecutive meeting.
The odds of a rate increase next
month have risen to 78 percent from 69 percent at the end of last week, Fed
fund futures show.
In other precious metals:
- Holdings in gold-backed exchange-traded funds rose 1.9 metric tons to 2,044.9 tons as of Thursday, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Assets are heading for the first weekly gain in three.
- Silver prices were little changed at $18.348 an ounce, set for a weekly increase of 3.3 percent.
- Platinum fell 0.3 percent, while palladium rose 0.2 percent.
Source: Bloomberg
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