Feb. 1 (Bloomberg)
Nickel dropped in London after Xstrata Plc said it reached a ``tentative'' agreement on a new labor contract with workers at a Canadian unit, avoiding a strike that would have affected 4 percent of global supply.
The union represents 1,027 workers at the Sudbury, Ontario, unit and threatened to strike unless agreement was reached by yesterday's deadline. Nickel rose to a record last week on speculation a strike would exacerbate a global supply shortfall.
``The market has been surprised by the last-minute settlement,'' said Kevin Tuohy, a trader at Man Financial Ltd. , one of 11 companies trading on the London Metal Exchange's floor. ``You may see prices down by another $2,000, $3,000,'' he said in an interview.
Nickel for delivery in three months on the LME fell $400, or 1 percent, to $36,600 a metric ton as of 12:28 p.m. local time. It earlier slid as much as 3 percent to $35,900. The metal used in stainless steel traded at a record $38,950 on Jan. 26.
The metal has risen more than sixfold in the past five years on demand from China, which overtook Japan last year as the world's largest stainless-steel producer. Global demand will beat supply by 1,000 tons in 2007, from a deficit of 6,000 tons last year, Daniel Brebner, an analyst at UBS AG, said yesterday in a report.
Nickel's decline wasn't ``massive'' in the context of the metal's historical price movement, Tuohy said. ``That indicates the market is very tight.''
Inventories Slump
Inventories dropped 606 metric tons, or 15 percent, to 3,366 tons, the LME said today in a daily report. That's the largest one-day decline since Aug. 9, 2004. Stockpiles have plunged 91 percent in the past 12 months to their lowest since July 1991. Feb. 1 (Bloomberg) -- Nickel dropped in London after Xstrata Plc said it reached a ``tentative'' agreement on a new labor contract with workers at a Canadian unit, avoiding a strike that would have affected 4 percent of global supply.
The union represents 1,027 workers at the Sudbury, Ontario, unit and threatened to strike unless agreement was reached by yesterday's deadline. Nickel rose to a record last week on speculation a strike would exacerbate a global supply shortfall.
``The market has been surprised by the last-minute settlement,'' said Kevin Tuohy, a trader at Man Financial Ltd. , one of 11 companies trading on the London Metal Exchange's floor. ``You may see prices down by another $2,000, $3,000,'' he said in an interview.
Nickel for delivery in three months on the LME fell $400, or 1 percent, to $36,600 a metric ton as of 12:28 p.m. local time. It earlier slid as much as 3 percent to $35,900. The metal used in stainless steel traded at a record $38,950 on Jan. 26.
The metal has risen more than sixfold in the past five years on demand from China, which overtook Japan last year as the world's largest stainless-steel producer. Global demand will beat supply by 1,000 tons in 2007, from a deficit of 6,000 tons last year, Daniel Brebner, an analyst at UBS AG, said yesterday in a report.
Nickel's decline wasn't ``massive'' in the context of the metal's historical price movement, Tuohy said. ``That indicates the market is very tight.''
Inventories Slump
Inventories dropped 606 metric tons, or 15 percent, to 3,366 tons, the LME said today in a daily report. That's the largest one-day decline since Aug. 9, 2004. Stockpiles have plunged 91 percent in the past 12 months to their lowest since July 1991.
Doesn't look to me like it's time to get out of Nickel yet!