Copper: China's Price Squeeze Means Correction Is Inevitable

 | Jun 08, 2021 18:00

Copper’s rally this year was huge, but there’s something even bigger: China’s price squeeze.

After the world’s most in-demand base metal reached record highs of $10,746 a tonne on the London Metal Exchange on May 10, its biggest buyer decided that enough was enough. 

Through a systematic reduction of copper imports in the weeks that followed—the cutback actually began in April, but deepened last month—China has managed to shave 8% off those peak prices, forcing the metal below its key bullish $10,000 level by Tuesday’s trade.

And the correction may just be beginning, based on charts signals, as well as on-again/off-again talks about Federal Reserve asset tapering, as the June meeting of the US central bank looms.