keywords :
Copper prices slipped on Monday, weighed down by persistent worries about the economy in top metals consumer China as the market grapples with COVID-19 and uncertainty over U.S. interest rate hikes.
Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange CMCU3 shed 1.2% to $8,451 a tonne by 1045 GMT after touching the highest in nearly six months on Friday.
Coronavirus symptoms are spreading rapidly in China after authorities began dismantling stringent measures against the disease, fuelling fears a wave in infections could heap pressure on its fragile health system and drive businesses to a halt.
“We can see that China is in a really poor state at the moment in terms of its economy. Things are turning up from quite a low level, so it’s a question of whether prices reflect where we are right now,” said Dan Smith, head of research at Amalgamated Metals Trading.
“We feel that we’re going to go lower in base metals over the next few weeks because of these problems in China.”
Many metals producers decided to retain COVID curbs in their factories to minimize infections and their impact on production.
The most-traded January copper contract on the Shanghai Futures Exchange SCFcv1 fell 1.2% to 66,030 yuan ($9,469.65) a tonne.
Also hitting sentiment was uncertainty over whether the U.S. Federal Reserve would ease the pace of interest rate hikes this week.
The European Central Bank and the Bank of England are also set to announce interest rate hikes during the week.
CITIC Futures said in a report that global central banks will likely stick with tight monetary policies, which will slow down global economic growth and subdue copper demand, against rising supply in the market.
It forecast LME copper prices to decline next year to an average of $7,700 a tonne, keeping rangebound between $6,900 and 8,500 a tonne.