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Copper Sees Worst Losing Streak Since 2018 on Virus Fears

Published 01/24/2020, 02:50 PM
Updated 01/24/2020, 04:36 PM
Copper Sees Worst Losing Streak Since 2018 on Virus Fears

(Bloomberg) -- Copper saw its worst streak of losses since mid-2018 as more patients were infected by the deadly coronavirus in the U.S., spurring a sell-off in riskier assets while boosting gold’s haven appeal.

U.S. officials are monitoring more than 60 people as they attempt to catch new cases of coronavirus in travelers from China, the center of the outbreak. Mounting concerns that the spreading deadly disease could further crimp global growth sent equities and commodities declining.

China, the world’s largest consumer of commodities including industrial metals, locked down Wuhan and its surrounding areas to contain the coronavirus, the first large-scale quarantine in modern times.

“If you all of a sudden take China off the board because you’re looking at shutting down mills and shutting down transportation to the mills, it’s going to hurt,” said Peter Thomas, a senior vice president at Chicago-based broker Zaner Group, said by phone.

Copper, often a barometer of global growth, fell 1.5% to settle at $2.684 a pound at 1:02 p.m. on the Comex in New York. March futures are down 6.6% since mid-January, the biggest seven-session loss for a most-active contract since July 11, 2018.

“We suspect that even more demand destruction fear is justified because the virus will also undermine Chinese sentiment and dampen the biggest shopping period of the Chinese calendar,” Phil Streible, chief market strategist at Blue Line Futures, said on an emailed note.

The Bloomberg Industrial Metals Subindex Total Return, which tracks copper, aluminum, zinc and nickel, slipped 1.3%, poised for the steepest four-day decline since September 2018. The wider commodities gauge is set for the biggest weekly loss since December 2018.

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The outbreak has also boosted bullion’s appeal as haven. Over the past five days, investors poured more than $1 billion into SPDR Gold Shares (NYSE:GLD), the largest exchange-traded fund backed by the metal.

On the Comex in New York, gold futures for April delivery rose, posting five straight weekly gains.

Story Link: BASE METALS: Copper Set for Worst Week Since 2018 on Virus Fears

Latest comments

If gold keep flying away, jp morgan who holds this market ans who has sold so many ETF without gold in the same proportions, (RATE 1/5000), will not manage to overcome this wave.... this bank will be the next in the future to fail, as impossible it seems to be, because the fed try desperatly to avoid a crisis aroud her, which is unavoidable... but one day this house of cards will *******away and if trump fail, it will be soon...
I'm also very curious if anyone attempted calling the GLD hotline at 866 320 4053 in search of numerical details on GLD's insurance? The prospectus vaguely states "The Custodian maintains insurance with regard to its business on such terms and conditions as it considers appropriate which does not cover the full amount of gold held in custody." When I asked about how much of the gold was insured, the representative proceeded to act as if he didn't know and said they were just the "marketing agent" for GLD. What kind of marketing agent would not know such basic information about a product they are marketing? It seems like they are deliberately hiding information from investors.
"Over the past five days, investors poured more than $1 billion into SPDR Gold Shares (NYSE:GLD), the largest exchange-traded fund backed by the metal.". . How reliable are GLD's holding reports? GLD does not give retail investors the right to redeem for any of its mystery physical gold holdings. This fact alone ensures the GLD shares to be nothing more than paper at the end of the day. GLD also has a glaring audit loophole in their prospectus that states they have no right to audit subcustodial gold holdings. To this day, I have not heard of a single good reason for the existence of this backdoor to the fund. . . I remember there was a highly publicized visit by CNBC's Bob Pisani to GLD's gold vault. This visit was organized by GLD's management to prove the existence of GLD's gold but the gold bar held up by Mr. Pisani had the serial number ZJ6752 which did not appear on the most recent bar list at that time. It was later discovered that this "GLD" bar was actually owned by ETF Securities.
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