The U.S. currency reversed gains and fell against the euro and declined for a sixth day against the yen. Copper has climbed 29 percent this year as an index of the dollar against six currencies including the euro and the pound has dropped 4.1 percent.
``The dollar is helping to support commodity prices,'' said Leon Westgate, a metals analyst at Standard Bank Ltd. in London. ``The main driver is money flow.''
Copper for delivery in three months gained $10 to $8,585 a metric ton as of 12:48 p.m. on the London Metal Exchange. Prices yesterday rose to $8,661, the highest since May 2006 when copper gained to a record $8,880 a ton.
The higher prices have curbed demand in China, the world's biggest user, said Eric Yan, head of China trade at Triland Metals Ltd. in London.
``If copper goes up to $10,000, Chinese demand will be dramatically reduced,'' he said. ``Chinese demand is quite weak and I don't think it will recover very soon.''
Nickel rose $400 to $33,600 a ton. Prices have climbed 15 percent since a strike began Feb. 28 at a Colombian mine owned by BHP Billiton Ltd. The workers are still on strike, Illtud Harri, a spokesman for BHP in London, said in an e-mail today.
No comments:
Post a Comment