SMM Morning Comments (Oct 12)

Published: Oct 12, 2018 09:55
SMM Morning Comments

SHANGHAI, Oct 12 (SMM) –

Copper: LME copper rebounded to a high of $6,300/mt as the dollar fell poor data from the consumer price index (CPI). The SHFE 1811 contract also gained and tried to stand firmly above the 10-day moving average overnight with a shorter MACD red line. Shrinking inventories provided some support to copper prices while anticipated growth in Chinese infrastructure and upbeat orders for stockpiling before the year-end buoyed SHFE copper. LME copper is likely to trade at $6,150-6,280/mt today; the SHFE 1811 contract is expected to trade at 50,060-50,650 yuan/mt. Spot prices are seen between discounts of 30 yuan/mt to premiums of 30 yuan/mt.

Aluminium: While the SHFE 1812 contract closed higher than its opening price overnight, it traded rangebound in negative territory and ended at 14,260 yuan/mt. It is expected to trade at 14,150-14,300 yuan/mt today with spot discounts at 60-20 yuan/mt. LME aluminium fluctuated to a six-day losing streak and notched a new low in three weeks on Thursday. Its weekly KDJ lines expanded downwards but support remained at $2,000/mt. It is likely to trade at $2,010-2,050/mt today.

Zinc: While LME zinc nudged up on Thursday, its trading level edged down. The contract received some support from declines in LME inventories, but was under pressure from the five- and 10-day moving averages which adhered to each other. LME zinc is likely to hover at $2,585-2,635/mt today. The SHFE 1811 contract fell after it opened high in positive territory overnight. Pressure was at the upper Bollinger band. Spreads between the October and November contracts exceeded 1,100 yuan/mt. The SHFE 1811 contract is likely to trade rangebound at 22,350-22,850 yuan/mt today.

Nickel: LME nickel and the SHFE 1811 contract rebounded overnight as the US dollar weakened and the growth in US consumer price index for September missed expectations. LME nickel rallied to a high of $12,780/mt and settled at $12,705/mt, with LME stocks dipping 600 mt to 224,928 mt. The SHFE 1811 contract slid from a high of 105,150 yuan/mt to close at 104,700 yuan/mt. Fundamentals supported and grew both supply and demand. We forecast LME nickel hovering around $12,600/mt today, with the SHFE 1811 contract trading at 103,500-105,000 yuan/mt. Spot prices are set at 103,500-110,500 yuan/mt today.

Lead: LME lead sharply rebounded and gained more than 4% on Thursday after it multiple consecutive trading days of decline. It is likely to extend its gains today. Strong performance in LME lead pushed the SHFE 1811 contract to open higher overnight. But the SHFE contract fell to a low of 18,330 yuan/mt before it rebounded to a high of 18,540 yuan/mt. Longs and shorts diverged at the 18,500 yuan/mt level.

Tin: As longs added their positions, LME zinc moved out of its multiple-day trading range to a high of $19,340/mt before it pared some gains to end below $19,300/mt. The SHFE 1901 contract climbed to the 148,000 yuan/mt level overnight, tracking the strong performance of its LME counterpart. It is likely to struggle to break the resistance at that level today, with the next resistance at 149,000 yuan/mt.

Data Source Statement: Except for publicly available information, all other data are processed by SMM based on publicly available information, market communication, and relying on SMM‘s internal database model. They are for reference only and do not constitute decision-making recommendations.

For any inquiries or to learn more information, please contact: lemonzhao@smm.cn
For more information on how to access our research reports, please contact:service.en@smm.cn
Related News
Fed's Waller: Ready to Cut Rates if Labor Market Weakens, Cautious on Inflation Risks
8 hours ago
Fed's Waller: Ready to Cut Rates if Labor Market Weakens, Cautious on Inflation Risks
Read More
Fed's Waller: Ready to Cut Rates if Labor Market Weakens, Cautious on Inflation Risks
Fed's Waller: Ready to Cut Rates if Labor Market Weakens, Cautious on Inflation Risks
US Fed Governor Christopher Waller said on Friday that if signs of weakness emerged in the labor market, he would again support an interest rate cut later this year, while remaining alert to the inflationary pressures that the current geopolitical situation may bring.Waller noted that a closure of the Strait of Hormuz signaled greater inflationary pressure, and that higher oil prices could ultimately affect core inflation. He stressed that the current cautious stance did not mean there would be no action for the rest of the year.His remarks sent an important signal to the market—that the window for an interest rate cut had not closed, provided that employment data showed clear weakening.
8 hours ago
IRGC: US Carrier Ford's Deployment and Withdrawal Reflects "Desperate and Humiliating" Reality for US, Israel
8 hours ago
IRGC: US Carrier Ford's Deployment and Withdrawal Reflects "Desperate and Humiliating" Reality for US, Israel
Read More
IRGC: US Carrier Ford's Deployment and Withdrawal Reflects "Desperate and Humiliating" Reality for US, Israel
IRGC: US Carrier Ford's Deployment and Withdrawal Reflects "Desperate and Humiliating" Reality for US, Israel
According to Xinhua News Agency, the Islamic Republic News Agency reported on the 20th that the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps issued a statement saying that, despite extensive attention from Western media, the US Navy aircraft carrier Ford was deployed to the West Asia region but failed to provide support for US forces there and instead withdrew from the battlefield, reflecting the “desperate and humiliating” reality facing the US and Israel.
8 hours ago
US Treasury Secretary Bessent: SPR Release Complexity and Limits Amid Oil Price Stabilization Efforts
8 hours ago
US Treasury Secretary Bessent: SPR Release Complexity and Limits Amid Oil Price Stabilization Efforts
Read More
US Treasury Secretary Bessent: SPR Release Complexity and Limits Amid Oil Price Stabilization Efforts
US Treasury Secretary Bessent: SPR Release Complexity and Limits Amid Oil Price Stabilization Efforts
US Treasury Secretary Bessent claimed that the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) could be tapped again to suppress oil prices, but the reality was far more complex than this statement suggested—the reserve level was already close to the statutory minimum, and physical safety constraints left extremely limited room for any further release.Last week, Bessent said that the US had participated in the largest internationally coordinated SPR release operation to date, totaling 400 million barrels, and warned that, if necessary, the US could once again unilaterally release reserves to stabilize oil prices.
8 hours ago