BULLION:-
Gold The dollar
index, which measures the greenback against a basket of six major currencies,
was down 0.1 per cent. China and the United States plunged deeper into a
trade war on Tuesday after Beijing added $60 billion of US products to its
import tariff list in retaliation for President Donald Trump's planned levies
on $200 billion worth of Chinese goods. Asian stocks rose and US Treasury
yields hovered near four-month highs on Wednesday, as investors looked past the
latest escalation in the US-China trade conflict, seen by some market
participants as less severe than expected. The US Senate voted
overwhelmingly on Tuesday to pass a mammoth spending package including $675
billion for the Defense Department and a measure to keep the entire federal
government open until Dec. 7, a step toward avoiding a Sept. 30 shutdown.
METALS:-
London copper
led the gains overnight and settled 2.36% higher at $6,091/mt when eased market
worries buoyed most base metals. It broke resistance at the 40-day moving
average as shorts exited, and may test pressure above at the 60-day moving
average in the short run. The SHFE 1811 contract also closed higher at 49,610
yuan/mt after rising to a high of 49,730 yuan/mt. Spot premiums will remain
firm at 250-310 yuan/mt today. Both LME nickel and the SHFE
1811 contract closed slightly higher as investors reduced concerns over the
China-US trade war. Fresh US tariffs imposed on Chinese goods are expected to
cause limited impact on the downstream stainless steel sector as China barely
exports such products to the US. We expect LME nickel to consolidate around
$12,300/mt today with the 1811 contract trading at 101,500-103,000 yuan/mt.
Spot prices are set at 101,500-108,000 yuan/mt today.
ENERGY:-
Oil prices on
Wednesday pulled back from gains racked up the previous day, pushed down amid a
surprise climb in U.S. crude stockpiles. U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI)
crude CLc1 fell 0.20 percent, or 14 cents, to $69.71 a barrel. U.S.
crude inventories rose by 1.2 million barrels to 397.1 million in the week to
Sept. 14, according to data released on Tuesday by the American Petroleum
Institute (API). That compared with analyst expectations for a decrease of 2.7
million barrels. Stockpiles of distillate fuels, which include diesel and heating
oil, rose by 1.5 million barrels, the API data showed, compared with
expectations for a 651,000-barrel gain. U.S. crude build temporarily grabbed
trader attention," said Chen Kai, head of commodities research at broker
Shengda Futures.
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