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China's voracious commodities appetite moves markets

China rate hikes ruffle commodities
Commodity prices diverged this week as traders took their cue from interest hikes in China, one of the world's biggest consumers of raw materials. Traders also reacted to a strengthening dollar, which makes commodities more expensive for holders of weaker currencies, weighing on demand. The dollar rose against the euro on Friday as leading finance ministers met amid talk of a global currency war between countries looking to currency weakness to boost exports. The United States urged G20 powers to reform their currency regimes to shore up the fragile world economy after a devastating crisis, but faced resistance to its ideas on Friday. G20 finance ministers and central bankers opened a two-day meeting in South Korea, stalked by warnings of an all-out currency war between debtor nations such as the United States and export powerhouses such as China.

Ministers from the G7 grouping of North America, Western Europe and Japan met for an hour ahead of the G20 talks, facing warnings that failure to rectify skewed economic growth could ignite 1930s-style trade protectionism. OIL: Oil prices fell after China, the world's biggest energy consuming nation moved to raise interest rates to contain inflation and soaring property prices. "The correction in oil on Tuesday was the result of the surprise move by China to raise interest rates," said Victor Shum, an analyst with energy consultancy Purvin and Gertz in Singapore. "The fear is that China will slow down in its economic growth and will reduce the buying of commodities and everything else." By late Friday on London's Intercontinental Exchange, Brent North Sea crude for delivery in December dropped to 82.10 dollars a barrel from 83.60 dollars a week earlier. On the New York Mercantile Exchange, Texas light sweet crude for December slid to 80.61 dollars a barrel from 82.41 dollars.
by Staff Writers
London (AFP) Oct 24, 2010
China, the world's second largest economy and its number one energy consumer, is shaking up global commodities markets where its potent growth momentum is also powering a rise in metals prices.

"China is now the largest energy consumer by our definition," Nobuo Tanaka, head of the International Energy Agency, said recently.

"Probably half of the oil demand increase comes from China. China's consumption is growing, growing, but we don't know how long China will continue to grow."

China, which relies on coal to meet 70 percent of its energy needs, is nonetheless the world's second largest oil consumer behind the United States.

"The center of gravity (in the energy market) is shifting from the Middle East to Asia," Mikkal Herberg of the National Bureau of Asian Research told a conference here earlier this month.

China has stepped up an investment drive to assure itself of a steady supply of oil from Iraq to Latin America where the leading Chinese refiner Sinopec in early October acquired a 40 percent stake in the Brazilian branch of Spanish energy company Repsol.

"There is in China a big supply concern of ensuring what they need -- energy and food but also metals," noted Philippa Malmgren of the Canonbury Group.

Given the depth of its demand, China is fuelling a rise in base metals prices that according to some analysts could be maintained for the next several years. Copper prices recently rose to the levels that prevailed before the 2008 financial crisis while prices for tin hit record highs.

Analysts have said small increases in the supply of metals would likely prove to be insufficient to meet rising demand from emerging markets.

Malmgren said China was now engaged in the construction of new airports, railways and new cities, activities that are "very metal intensive."

"We have structural demand there which is not going to decrease."

Daniel Brebner of Deutsche Bank predicted that China's copper requirements "could double over the next decade."

But other economists urge caution, citing China's dependence on western economies and the determination of Chinese authorities to avert economic overheating.

"Although China is now the single most important consumer of industrial metals, ... the next three places are typically filled by the United States, Japan and Germany," said John Higgins of Capital Economics.

"These developed economies face a long period of sluggish growth. Nor is China immune to what happens in the West, especially if the United States lurches toward protectionism. And there are plenty of downside risks to China itself.

"At the very least, economic growth is likely to be slower and less commodity intenseive over the next several years."

China on Thursday said its economy grew at a slower but still robust pace in the third quarter, which according to analysts showed that efforts to steer the country toward more sustainable growth were working.

Gross domestic product expanded 9.6 percent year-on-year in the third quarter, beating forecasts for 9.5 percent growth, according to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) data.

The figure marked a decline from 10.3 percent growth in the second quarter and 11.9 percent in the first three months as Beijing started to withdraw stimulus measures introduced to combat the global crisis.



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