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World commodities
ON November 28, gold slid under the $800 mark on the London market, as softer oil prices and a firmer dollar against the euro dented the metal’s wider appeal for investors. Spot gold hit an intraday high of $815.30, but later fell sharply, losing more than 2 per cent at one point to a low of $792.10. A stronger dollar makes gold dearer for non-US buyers while easing oil prices take the heat out of gold’s role as a hedge against oil-led inflation. However, traders generally remained confident on the metal’s ability to contain losses below $800 due to expectations for further dollar losses as investors anticipated cuts in US borrowing costs that would dent the dollar’s yield appeal. Gold hit a 28-year peak above $845 on November 7, but has since stalled twice in attempting to reach those levels again. Analysts are refusing however to rule out another run to the November peak and a record high seen in January 1980 at $850. In other bullion markets, benchmark October 2008 gold futures on the Tokyo Commodity Exchange ended 76 yen per gram or 2.6 per cent lower at 2,837 yen. Comex gold futures extended losses with the most active December contract trading down $15.60 at $798.30. Gold de-hedging slowed markedly in the third quarter of this year, with 0.98 million ounces or 31 tonnes taken off the global producer hedge book, a study from precious metals consultant GFMS showed. Meanwhile, platinum hit a record $1475 a troy ounce on November 23, gaining 2 per cent in the week ended November 24-25 on news of further supply disruptions in South Africa. Impala Platinum, the world’s second-largest producer, shut one of two shafts at its Marula mine after a worker was killed. Strike action by the National Union of Mineworkers is planned for December 4 and the government is to start a nationwide safety audit this month, which is raising concerns about further supply disruptions in an already tight market. LEAD, was being squeezed by commodities funds, creating artificial tightness despite relatively good supply. But the funds now face higher carrying costs, and lead, most commonly used in batteries, is starting to see its price buckle. Production previously not registered is trickling back to the market. From January through mid-October, London Metal Exchange prices more than doubled, peaking at $3,890 a ton on October 10 as reported global inventories fell to 17-year lows. But after it became the second metal behind nickel to exceed its inflation-adjusted high, lead nose-dived by 28 per cent. LME lead is currently trading at $2,920/tonne, down 11.5 per cent on the week. LME stocks fell 50 per cent in the first nine months of the year, but then doubled to more than 40,000 tons in October. This wasn’t because production was ramped up or demand collapsed. In fact, production in China, the world’s biggest lead maker, has been dropping, owing to a government crackdown on industrial polluters. This has left plenty of spare capacity within the Asian nation. A 13 per cent tax on lead-concentrate imports in China has changed the industry’s economics, making it more expensive for Chinese smelters to buy the critical raw material. Customs data show that imports of concentrate dropped 10 per cent from the year-earlier level in September. In the same month, a 10 per cent export duty trimmed Chinese exports of refined lead by 70 per cent. But while visible inventories have risen of late, most of this lead hasn’t shown up in LME warehouses, leaving analysts to wonder whether it‘s piling up in China instead. It could be that Chinese consumption is growing rapidly and eating up any surplus. The rising number of cars, scooters and electric bicycles in China has caused battery demand to soar, the International lead and Zinc Study Group notes.
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