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Chinese investors holding metal inventories are unlikely to sell them quickly because of adequate levels of cash on hand, a senior executive at Sucden Financial Ltd said yesterday.
The downside risk to metals prices is limited due to high liquidity, Jeremy Goldwyn, who oversees business development in Asia for London-based Sucden, said in an interview at a Hong Kong conference. Copper prices may rise to record levels sometime next year, said Goldwyn.
Inventories of copper at warehouses monitored by the Shanghai Futures Exchange are more than five times the level at the beginning of the year after 4 trillion yuan ($586 billion) in stimulus spending and State stockpiling boosted imports to a record. Prices in London have more than doubled this year on record Chinese imports.
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Inventories of copper at Shanghai warehouses stood at 95,976 tons last week, up from 17,822 tons at the start of the year. China's copper imports more than doubled in the first nine months to 2.6 million metric tons, according to customs data.
Private Chinese investors may have stockpiled more than 50,000 tons of copper and as much as 20,000 tons of nickel, Goldwyn said on Sept 17. Chinese smelters may have between 200,000 and 300,000 tons of lead stockpiled, he said then.
Gauging metals demand in China is notoriously difficult amid increased speculation by retail investors. A possible overhang in supply amid high imports and production threatens to damp demand, Chen Hongzhou, vice-manager of the marketing department at Chinalco Luoyang Copper Co, said.