• Contact
Saturday, October 18, 2025
  • Login
The African Business - News About African business
  • Home
  • EconomyNew
    nigeria

    Nigeria in talks with China for $2bn loan for super grid

    REFINARIA de cabinda distição, Marcelo Hofke, CEO da Gemcorp Angola

    Newly Inaugurated Cabinda Refinery Awarded Downstream Operator of the Year in Luanda

    china

    Africa is becoming one of China’s favorite markets, and Trump may have helped

    Trending Tags

  • Business
    dhl

    DHL plans to invest €300m to expand logistics in Africa

    kenya airways

    Kenya Airways takes off on locally made jet biofuel in bid to attract green investment

    vodacom

    Africa’s second-largest telecom operator to invest $29 million in 5G expansion in South Africa

    multichoice

    French media giant Canal+ to list in South Africa after $3 billion MultiChoice takeover

    refinery

    Africa’s refining capacity expands as Uganda’s $4 billion oil refinery nears 2030 start

    dangote

    Dangote’s wealth rebounds to $29 billion despite domestic pressures, on cement and refinery growth

    Arthur Eze

    Nigerian billionaire to invest $800 million in four offshore oil blocks in Liberia

    elon musk

    Elon Musk is a step closer to becoming a trillionaire. Here’s a look at his rising wealth

    Multichoice logo on building 900x675

    South Africa’s MultiChoice set for new ownership as $3bn takeover deal gets green light

  • Finance
    Standard Bank

    South Africa banks curb lending over climate-related default risks, study finds

    Armando Jorge Mota

    Armando Jorge Mota Announced as New CEO of Sanlam Angola Seguros

    Nigeria asks banks to save forex gains amid currency risks

    Nigeria asks banks to save forex gains amid currency risks

    PayPal finally launches Apple Pay support for its credit and debit cards

    PayPal finally launches Apple Pay support for its credit and debit cards

    TLG Capital launches ₦2.25B collateralized credit facility for OnePipe

    TLG Capital launches ₦2.25B collateralized credit facility for OnePipe

    Silicon Valley Bank: Global bank stocks slump despite Biden reassurances

    Silicon Valley Bank: Global bank stocks slump despite Biden reassurances

    [Kenya] Digital credit provider Tala disbursed Sh240 billion in loans in eight years

    [Kenya] Digital credit provider Tala disbursed Sh240 billion in loans in eight years

    Digital banking revolution can help SA banks regain their customers’ love, says BCG

    Digital banking revolution can help SA banks regain their customers’ love, says BCG

    Nigeria launches payments card program to rival Visa and Mastercard

    Nigeria launches payments card program to rival Visa and Mastercard

  • Opinion
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Green Economy
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • EconomyNew
    nigeria

    Nigeria in talks with China for $2bn loan for super grid

    REFINARIA de cabinda distição, Marcelo Hofke, CEO da Gemcorp Angola

    Newly Inaugurated Cabinda Refinery Awarded Downstream Operator of the Year in Luanda

    china

    Africa is becoming one of China’s favorite markets, and Trump may have helped

    Trending Tags

  • Business
    dhl

    DHL plans to invest €300m to expand logistics in Africa

    kenya airways

    Kenya Airways takes off on locally made jet biofuel in bid to attract green investment

    vodacom

    Africa’s second-largest telecom operator to invest $29 million in 5G expansion in South Africa

    multichoice

    French media giant Canal+ to list in South Africa after $3 billion MultiChoice takeover

    refinery

    Africa’s refining capacity expands as Uganda’s $4 billion oil refinery nears 2030 start

    dangote

    Dangote’s wealth rebounds to $29 billion despite domestic pressures, on cement and refinery growth

    Arthur Eze

    Nigerian billionaire to invest $800 million in four offshore oil blocks in Liberia

    elon musk

    Elon Musk is a step closer to becoming a trillionaire. Here’s a look at his rising wealth

    Multichoice logo on building 900x675

    South Africa’s MultiChoice set for new ownership as $3bn takeover deal gets green light

  • Finance
    Standard Bank

    South Africa banks curb lending over climate-related default risks, study finds

    Armando Jorge Mota

    Armando Jorge Mota Announced as New CEO of Sanlam Angola Seguros

    Nigeria asks banks to save forex gains amid currency risks

    Nigeria asks banks to save forex gains amid currency risks

    PayPal finally launches Apple Pay support for its credit and debit cards

    PayPal finally launches Apple Pay support for its credit and debit cards

    TLG Capital launches ₦2.25B collateralized credit facility for OnePipe

    TLG Capital launches ₦2.25B collateralized credit facility for OnePipe

    Silicon Valley Bank: Global bank stocks slump despite Biden reassurances

    Silicon Valley Bank: Global bank stocks slump despite Biden reassurances

    [Kenya] Digital credit provider Tala disbursed Sh240 billion in loans in eight years

    [Kenya] Digital credit provider Tala disbursed Sh240 billion in loans in eight years

    Digital banking revolution can help SA banks regain their customers’ love, says BCG

    Digital banking revolution can help SA banks regain their customers’ love, says BCG

    Nigeria launches payments card program to rival Visa and Mastercard

    Nigeria launches payments card program to rival Visa and Mastercard

  • Opinion
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Green Economy
No Result
View All Result
The African Business - News About African business
No Result
View All Result
Home Business

What happens when the world’s key metal exchange has no metal?

TAB by TAB
25/10/2021
in Business
0
What happens when the world’s key metal exchange has no metal?

What happens when the world’s key metal exchange has no metal?

0
SHARES
10
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

What happens when the world’s key metal exchange has no metal?

What happens when the London Metal Exchange runs out of metal? That’s the question the exchange is urgently trying to address for its flagship copper contract, which sets the global price for one of the world’s most important commodities.

What happens when the world’s key metal exchange has no metal?

Related posts

dhl

DHL plans to invest €300m to expand logistics in Africa

16/10/2025
10
kenya airways

Kenya Airways takes off on locally made jet biofuel in bid to attract green investment

16/10/2025
3

The problem stems from the LME’s physical nature: anyone holding a contract to expiry becomes the owner of a package of metal in an LME warehouse. On the other hand, anyone who has sold one must deliver the metal when the contract expires.

But with available copper inventories at LME warehouses falling below 20,000 tonnes — less than China’s factories consume in one day — traders are grappling with the possibility that there simply won’t be metal available to deliver.

The dramatic drop in stockpiles that began in August and accelerated this month has sent the nearest LME contracts spiking to record premiums over copper for later delivery. That’s particularly painful for copper fabricators — companies that turn basic metal into things like wires, plates and tubes, and who tend to sell LME futures to hedge their price exposure.

But the emptying warehouses have also helped drive benchmark prices toward record levels and copper’s pervasive role in the world means that the jump in costs will add to wide-reaching inflationary pressure for manufacturers and builders. And while mounting threats to global economic activity are raising questions about the outlook for copper demand, inventories on Chinese and US rivals to the LME are also low.

What happens when the world’s key metal exchange has no metal?
What happens when the world’s key metal exchange has no metal?

Only a small fraction of the world’s copper ever enters an LME warehouse, and copper users tend to have long-term contracts with producers and traders rather than seeking supplies from the exchange. Nonetheless, the fact that exchange stocks are so low — and not just on the LME — shows that the market’s buffer has worn dangerously thin.

The LME brought in emergency measures on Tuesday evening to address the situation. Among them was a temporary change in rules allowing anyone with a short position who is unable to deliver copper to defer their delivery obligation for a fee.

“This is an unprecedented situation, and we haven’t seen anything like this in the recent history of the copper market,” said Robin Bhar, an independent consultant who’s been analyzing the LME metals markets for more than 35 years.

“These market actions are draconian, but they are needed.”

The LME has also started an inquiry, asking banks and brokers for information on their and their clients’ activity in the copper market over the past two months. Trading house Trafigura Group withdrew a significant proportion of the copper that’s been pulled from LME warehouses in recent months, Bloomberg reported Tuesday.

Trafigura responded by saying it had taken LME stocks to deliver to end users, emphasizing there’s strong copper demand that is oustripping available supply. “Trafigura’s role is to ensure security of supply of commodities for its customers,” a spokesperson for the trading house said.

The LME’s actions are designed to avoid the catastrophic outcome where there simply isn’t the metal available to meet requests for delivery. By launching an inquiry, the exchange might make traders and banks think twice before requesting further deliveries.

And with its rule changes, the LME has attempted to defuse the possibility of a squeeze that runs out of control. It is allowing holders of short positions to defer their delivery obligations — by rolling their position to the next day. It also put a hard cap on how much more expensive copper contracts expiring in one business day can rise over those for a day later.

Finally, the exchange has tweaked its rules governing traders who hold a large proportion of available LME stocks. Ordinarily, traders in that position are forced to lend out their position to others in the market at a punitively low rate. But with stocks so low, the LME is worried that that rule might deter traders from holding stock on the exchange.

Nickel spike

It’s not the first time that the LME has intervened in its markets. In 2019, the exchange launched a similar inquiry when a rush of orders to withdraw nickel triggered a spike in the nickel price. The market calmed, and the LME took no further action.

In 2006, amid soaring nickel prices, it imposed a $300 limit on the daily backwardation in the nickel market. And in 1992, when Marc Rich + Co. attempted to corner the zinc market, the LME imposed many of the same measures it has done in copper this week: placing hard limits on the backwardation and allowing holders of short positions to defer delivery.

The copper price retreated on Wednesday, and nearby backwardations eased from recent highs — perhaps an early indication that the LME’s moves have born some fruit. Liquidity in LME contracts tends to be concentrated on the third Wednesday of the month: now traders are hoping for a period of relative calm.

Still, the LME can’t change the reality that stocks are depleted across the global copper industry, with inventories on exchanges in China and the U.S. also at historically low levels.

“The LME are in an unenviable position, with stocks being so low,” Bhar said. “Hopefully this will be seen as an attempt to cool a red-hot market.”

Mining

Previous Post

IHS gets $7bn valuation in New York

Next Post

Diamantino Azevedo calls for persistence work for semi-industrial diamond exploration in Angola

Next Post
Diamantino Azevedo calls for persistence work for semi-industrial diamond exploration in Angola

Diamantino Azevedo calls for persistence work for semi-industrial diamond exploration in Angola

RECOMMENDED NEWS

PetroNor announces reserves upgrade at PNGF Sud in Congo Brazzaville

4 years ago
10
Afreximbank launches insurance subsidiary to support intra-African trade

Afreximbank launches insurance subsidiary to support intra-African trade

2 years ago
2
Joint bank account: To succeed, create common family goals first

Joint bank account: To succeed, create common family goals first

4 years ago
3
South Africa fans celebrate return to stadium after restrictions lifted

South Africa fans celebrate return to stadium after restrictions lifted

4 years ago
6

BROWSE BY CATEGORIES

  • Business
  • Economy
  • Finance
  • Green Economy
  • Lifestyle
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Uncategorized

Ads

Categories

  • Business
  • Economy
  • Finance
  • Green Economy
  • Lifestyle
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Uncategorized
The African Business - News About African business

We bring you the best Premium news about African Business.

Follow us on social media:

Recent News

  • DHL plans to invest €300m to expand logistics in Africa
  • Kenya Airways takes off on locally made jet biofuel in bid to attract green investment
  • Africa’s second-largest telecom operator to invest $29 million in 5G expansion in South Africa

Category

  • Business
  • Economy
  • Finance
  • Green Economy
  • Lifestyle
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Uncategorized

Legal Information

Terms and Conditions
Privacy Policy
Complaints Book

  • Contact

© 2021 The African Business

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Economy
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Opinion
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Green Economy

© 2021 The African Business