Tuesday, February 3, 2015

Nickel to see first deficit in 5 years: Sumitomo

Nickel to see first deficit in 5 years: Sumitomo
The Japanese Nickel mining major- Sumitomo Metal Mining Co. has predicted that Nickel will end in deficit during 2015, the first time in five years. The demand for the metal will outpace production by 12,000 metric tons during the year. The company predicts notable decline in supply from China. The global output of Nickel had ended in surplus of 36,000 mt during last year.
According to Hiroshi Sueta, General Manager, Sales and Raw materials Department, the ore stockpiles in China are most likely to get exhausted by mid-2015. The Chinese Nickel Pig Iron (NPI) output is likely to decline 15% year –on-year to 365,000 tons in 2015. The Chinese NPI production had dropped 4.4% in 2014. After Indonesia imposed ban on exports of processed ore, China had boosted imports from Philippines. In order to meet the excessive demand, the country also had destocked ore inventories in large quantities.
Sumitomo further anticipates the global nickel demand growth to slow down to 4% in 2015 from 7.4% in 2014. The sharp fall in oil prices have reduced the intake of the metal by energy producers for use in pipes and tanks. Meantime, the global nickel output is forecast to increase by 1.5% during 2015 to 1.99 million tons.
Meantime, LME Nickel for delivery in three months jumped higher by 1.8% to $15,165 per ton on Jan 30th.

MCX Holiday Schedule 2015

MCX Holiday Schedule 2015
Trading Holidays
Proposed list of trading holidays of the Exchange for the calendar year 2015
Sr. No.ParticularsDateDaysMorning Session
(10:00 am to
5:00 pm)
Evening Session
(5:00 pm to 11:30
/11:55 pm)
1New Year’s Day1-Jan-15ThursdayOpenClosed
2Republic Day26-Jan-15MondayClosedClosed
3Mahashivratri17-Feb-15TuesdayClosedOpen
4Holi6-Mar-15FridayClosedOpen
5Mahavir Jayanti2-Apr-15ThursdayClosedOpen
6Good Friday3-Apr-15FridayClosedClosed
7Dr. Ambedkar Jayanti14-Apr-15TuesdayClosedOpen
8Maharashtra Day1-May-15FridayClosedOpen
9Budha Purnima4-May-15MondayClosedOpen
10Independence Day15-Aug-15SaturdayClosedClosed
11Ganesh Chaturthi17-Sep-15ThursdayClosedOpen
12Bakri ID (Idu’L Zuha)25-Sep-15FridayClosedOpen
13Gandhi Jayanti2-Oct-15FridayClosedClosed
14Dusssera22-Oct-15ThursdayClosedOpen
15Diwali - Laxmi Puja11-Nov-15WednesdayClosedOpen from
(6 pm to 8.30 pm)
16Diwali – Balipratipada12-Nov-15ThursdayClosedOpen
17Guru Nanak Jayanti25-Nov-15WednesdayClosedOpen
18Id-E-Milad
(Prophet Mohammad’s
Birthday)
24-Dec-15ThursdayClosedOpen
19Christmas25-Dec-15FridayClosedClosed

Monday, February 2, 2015

Commodity Market Holiday Schedule 2015

Commodity Market Holiday Schedule 2015

Date                 Holiday                 Market Closed*
Dec 25 2014 Christmas Holiday (Observed) LME/ COMEX / NYMEX
Dec 26 2014 Boxing Day LME
Jan 01 2015 New Year's Day (Observed) LME / COMEX / NYMEX / SHFE
Jan 19 2015 Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. (Observed) COMEX / NYMEX
Feb 16 2015 Presidents Day COMEX / NYMEX
Feb 18 2015 Spring Festival SHFE
Feb 19 2015 Spring Festival SHFE
Feb 20 2015 Spring Festival SHFE
Feb 21 2015 Spring Festival SHFE
Feb 22 2015 Spring Festival SHFE
Feb 23 2015 Spring Festival SHFE
Feb 24 2015 Spring Festival SHFE
Apr 3 2015 Good Friday LME / COMEX / NYMEX
Apr 6 2015 Easter Monday LME
Apr 06 2015 Tomb-sweeping Day SHFE
May 01 2015 Labor Day SHFE
May 02 2015 Labor Day SHFE
May 03 2015 Labor Day SHFE
May 4 2015 Early May Bank Holiday LME
May 25 2015 Spring Bank Holiday LME
May 25 2015 Memorial Day COMEX / NYMEX
Jun 20 2015 Dragon Boat Festival SHFE
Jun 21 2015 Dragon Boat Festival SHFE
Jun 22 2015 Dragon Boat Festival SHFE
Jul 3 2015 Independence Day COMEX / NYMEX
Aug 31 2015 Summer Bank Holiday LME
Sep 7 2015 Labor Day COMEX / NYMEX
Sep 27 2015 Mid-autumn Festival SHFE
Oct 01 2015 National Day SHFE
Oct 02 2015 National Day SHFE
Oct 03 2015 National Day SHFE
Oct 04 2015 National Day SHFE
Oct 05 2015 National Day SHFE
Oct 06 2015 National Day SHFE
Oct 07 2015 National Day SHFE
Nov 26 2015 Thanksgiving COMEX / NYMEX
Dec 25 2015 Christmas Holiday (Observed) LME/ COMEX / NYMEX
Dec 28 2015 Boxing Day LME
Jan 01 2016 New Year's Day (Observed) LME / COMEX / NYMEX / SHFE

* COMEX/NYMEX early closing on any business day preceding a holiday.
Oil and Gas close at 1:00 PM; Palladium closes at 12 noon; Copper and Silver at 12:05 PM; Platinum and Gold at 12:10 PM.

Speculators hike bearish copper bets as mood darkens - CFTC

Speculators hike bearish copper bets as mood darkens - CFTC
(Reuters) - Hedge funds and money managers increased their bearish positions in copper futures and options to a four-month high and raised their bullish bets in gold to their highest in just over two years in the week to Jan. 27, U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) data showed on Friday.
In silver , they increased their net long by 6,539 lots to 40,164, the highest since July last year.
Hedge fund and other speculative investors increased their net long in bullion by 21,960 contracts to 167,693, the most since late November 2012, while in copper, they increased their net short by 4,970 to 12,976, the highest since early October last year.
The higher net short in copper may leave the market vulnerable to a short-covering rally if any positive macroeconomic news comes out of China, the world's top consumer and producer, after the weeks-long selling that has wiped 16 percent off the value of copper since the start of the year.
While some traders say the selling has been overdone, many point to slowing demand from China as the reason to reduce exposure for now. March copper futures on COMEX hit fresh 5-1/2-year lows on Monday.
In stark contrast, bullion has been on a tear as the oil and base metals rout and the euro-zone instability have reignited its appeal to investors even as the dollar remains strong and the U.S. Federal Reserve reins in its years-long stimulus program.

India reclaims top spot as No. 1 gold consumer

India reclaims top spot as No. 1 gold consumer
India is back to being the number one consumer of gold, knocking China off the top of the podium as the country that consumed the most bullion in the form of gold bars, coins and jewelry, in 2014.
The latest update of the annual study by GFMS of world gold supply and demand found that sliding demand from China – which grabbed the top gold consumer mantle from India in 2011 – is behind the shift.
The report by GFMS analysts at Thomson Reuters showed that Chinese gold demand dropped by over a third to a four-year low of 866 tonnes, while scrap gold supply rose to a new high of 182 tonnes.
Slower economic growth and a crackdown on corruption conspired to cut Chinese jewelry demand to 608 tonnes, a full 33 percent below levels seen in 2013, the report said. Demand for gold bars fell 53 percent to 171 tonnes, a five-year low. An overhang of gold in the Chinese market during the voracious buying that occurred in 2013 was also a factor in keeping purchases subdued, according to GFMS.
Some analysts, however, question whether the numbers in the GFMS report tell the whole story.
Mineweb's Lawrence Williams noted that data from the USGS shows 32 percent of US gold exports in October went to Mainland China rather than through Hong Kong, the normal entrepot for bullion destined for China. Other export flows, especially from Switzerland, are going direct to the mainland. "[O]verall this suggest that Chinese consumption may be considerably higher than the GFMS report appears to suggest," Williams writes.
Meanwhile in India, jewelry demand in 2014 rocketed up 14 percent, to a record 690 tonnes, placing the country ahead of China as the world's top consumer of gold jewelry.
That trend was first noticed back in November when Indians bought 39 percent more gold in the run-up to Diwali and the start of the traditional wedding season.
A weakening of gold prices in rupee terms last year also boosted gold demand in India, along with confidence in the new government led by Narendra Modi, according to a World Gold Council report released mid-November. The country has also witnessed a significant increase of gold smuggling since the government ratcheted up restrictions and taxes on legitimate imports of the precious metal.
Other key findings of the GFMS report:
  • the gold market is currently in surplus, a situation that is expected to continue due to further liquidations from gold ETFs.
  • gold mine production rose last year by 2 percent, to a record 3,109 tonnes. However GFMS does not anticipate production to increase much this year, with most large gold mines now on stream.
  • mining companies are returning to net gold hedging, which was around 42 tonnes in 2014.
  • GFMS sees the gold price averaging $1,125 an ounce in the second quarter, rising to $1,160 in the second half.

Saturday, January 31, 2015

Scotiabank: Copper 'likely oversold'

Scotiabank: Copper 'likely oversold'
Not surprisingly the Commodity Price Index compiled by Scotiabank plunged in December to levels last seen during the global financial crisis.
The index was down over 10% compared to November and 15.4% year on year which the bank ascribes to "a fight for market share in international oil and iron ore markets as well as general unease over lacklustre global economic conditions and an almost ‘deflationary’ environment."
Apart from iron ore and oil where a market glut explains most of the downside, bellwether copper has been one of the hardest hit commodities.
In New York trade on Friday copper futures advanced nearly 2% on the back of a huge rally in oil and a comeback in the gold price, but at $2.50 a pound remains near mid-2009 lows.
Patricia Mohr, Scotiabank economist and commodity specialist, points out that even today's price "yields a slight 10% profit margin over average world breakeven costs including depreciation" and that the red metal has likely been oversold.
Copper has likely been ‘over-sold’, given the fifth-highest imports into China on record in December, new fiscal stimulus by Beijing to spur the economy (speeding up spending on 300 infrastructure projects) and a planned 24% increase in capital spending by the State Electricity Grid (likely geared towards copper cable).
Mining companies have recently cut projected output for 2015 by 300,000 tonnes (Rio Tinto at Kennecott, BHP Billiton at Escondida and Glencore at Alumbrera), helping to trim an expected surplus this year to a modest 250,000 tonnes.

Will India’s gold imports surge on tariff cuts? – Jayant Bhandari

Will India’s gold imports surge on tariff cuts? – Jayant Bhandari
India is the world’s second-largest importer of gold,1 currently taking in around 800 tonnes per year.2 In India, gold trades at a premium to international prices because of the hefty import duties and high domestic demand.
Jayant Bhandari advises funds and institutional investors on investing in India, and has commented on India’s impact on world gold demand for Sprott’s Thoughts.
In his last contribution, he said that India’s demand for gold would not be threatened by the heavy import tariffs that the government imposed in 2013. Smuggling and bribery would undermine government measures, he said.
He was dead-on. The Financial Times reports:
“About 200 tonnes of gold was smuggled into India in 2013, according to the World Gold Council, while officials at Mumbai’s international airport have complained that smugglers have been inventing new methods to hide the contraband metal.”
Now the Indian government is reversing its efforts to curtail gold imports, and gold importers expect a drop in import tariffs to be announced in the upcoming federal budget.
Prices are coming down as a result – traders who hold gold inventories are dishoarding reserves in anticipation that import tariffs will be lower in the future, as Jayant explained in a recent note:
As a result of the expected tariff cut, gold is trading 10% higher than international prices compared to about 12% or 13% higher a month back. As the import tax is a high 11.3%, gold traded at a slight premium to the official price, but now it trades at a slight discount. The reason is that traders and jewelers are reducing their stocks — it makes no sense for them to be stuck with gold when the price is expected to come down.
But will there be a big surge of gold imports as a result of tariff cuts? Probably not, says Jayant:
Now, Western media outlets (CNBC, e.g.) are thinking that a reduction in the import duty will suddenly increase the availability and demand for gold.
Availability was never a problem. Gold continues to be a very liquid commodity in India, with almost no spread. I don't think that a few percentage points’ reduction in the price of gold will make a noticeable difference to demand. A tariff cut will not lead to suddenly higher imports from India.
Even so, gold imports will continue to be strong, says Jayant, because holding gold is a good alternative to owning Rupees, Indian stocks, and real-estate for most Indians:
I have been telling people in India to load up on gold, for three reasons.
The economy is not doing well. Foreign and Indian investors have been hoping for big infrastructural projects and a significant liberalization of the economy to occur under the new Prime Minister, Narednra Modi. But the present government has done almost nothing in that direction.
Modi is a darling of the public for now, so the market still believes he will eventually do a lot for the economy. Foreign investors are enamored of Modi for his lip service for a more free market system.
People are hoping that the next federal budget will be a magic wand, bringing adjustments that will put the economy on the growth path painlessly. The truth is that entrenched interests from his own party would never let this happen, even if this were what the Prime Minister really wanted.
India’s currency keeps falling. As of January 29, it is down 6% in US dollar terms since its high during Modi’s inauguration in May 2014. This comes despite massive help from cheaper oil, which is India's biggest import commodity. Lower oil prices have slashed India's import bill. But it hasn’t stopped the Rupee from going lower. This tells you how weak the Indian export economy really is.
People typically leave out currency devaluation when looking at stock market performance, leading them to think that the Indian stock market has done better than it has in real terms. Now, of course, it has done well, even when adjusted for the Rupee's devaluation, but in my view it is one of the most over-priced stock markets today. Remember that Indians don't have many possibilities for moving their money abroad. So they generally must invest in domestic stocks and properties.
India’s property market is extremely expensive. Your rental yield, around 3%,4 is much lower than the official interest rate of 7.75%.5 So investors are left to hope that property prices keep increasing unhindered by the reality of rents.
Based on these three reasons, I think the economy will continue to do badly and the stock and property markets will fall significantly going forward. When this happens, people will look to gold as a store of value. So in my view, gold is a good place to be if you live in India. I expect that demand will continue to be strong, although tariff changes are likely to have only a small effect.