EconomyEditor's Pick

Copper falls the lowest in 3 months, pushed by Chinese smelters’ pledge to cut output

0

After a solid lift to near one-year highs the copper price is once again in danger of falling below US$8,820 a tonne in New York as the first quarter closes.

On London Metal Exchange (LME) prices have followed the same course after hitting a high of $9,164.50 on March 18, 2024.

A Zambia Monitor scan on Mining.com, an influential industry news platform, on Monday showed that copper’s runup was sparked by pledges from Chinese smelters to cut output by five-10 percent in the face of tighter-than-expected concentrate supply and overcapacity.

This was after years of China’s relentless expansion which had lifted the country’s global refining share to over 50 percent.

Read more: copper-trades-above-9000-per-tonne-highest-in-11-months

Evidence of how desperate Chinese refiners were to source raw material  was a report out Thursday by Bloomberg that BHP sold concentrate from Escondida.

This is the world’s largest copper mine, at spot treatment charges as low as US$3 per tonne and refining charges of 0.3 cents a pound to at least one Chinese smelter.

That constitutes at least a decade low and when prices declined to below $8,000 a tonne in 2023, treatment and refining charges paid by miners to refiners to convert concentrates into metal were north of US$90 a tonne.

WARNING! All rights reserved. This material, and other digital content on this website, may not be reproduced, published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in whole or in part without prior express permission from ZAMBIA MONITOR.

PEP leader, Tembo, faults arrest of Chief Chikwa of Chama District, wants charges dropped

Previous article

Group demands clear roadmap for reviving emerald mining in Lufwanyama

Next article

You may also like

Comments

Leave a reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

More in Economy