RPT-COLUMN-Funds flee cyclically confused copper market: Andy Home

In This Article:

(Repeats without change. The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters)

* Fund positioning on the CME copper contract: https://tmsnrt.rs/3j1Oqo8

By Andy Home

LONDON, June 22 (Reuters) - Copper's long-expected price correction has finally arrived.

London Metal Exchange (LME) three-month metal tumbled by 9% last week and on Monday hit a 10-week low of $9,011 a tonne. It was last trading at $9,230, 14% off May's record high of $10,747.50.

Bull exuberance has been dowsed temporarily by signals that both the U.S. Federal Reserve and the Chinese authorities are concerned about inflation.

The Fed's suggestion that it might raise interest rates sooner than expected and Beijing's announcement that it is preparing to release strategic metal reserves were a double hit to copper's reflation credentials, compounded by a stronger post-Fed dollar.

But this correction was by no means unexpected, with a sense that the year-long copper rally was running on empty as funds took profits and rotated to other sectors such as resurgent oil.

Money manager long positioning is now much reduced and some funds are even starting to build short positions, which is a sign of just how confused the immediate outlook is for the poster child of the supposed commodities supercycle.

TAKE THE MONEY

Fund managers have been taking profits on copper's post-pandemic recovery rally since the first days of May. Outright long positions on the CME contract have fallen by 35% to 65,367 contracts.

The managed money net long position has shrunk to only 20,389 contracts, the smallest collective bet on higher prices since June last year, when copper was trading around $6,000.

It's worth noting that the latest Commitments of Traders Report covers the state of play as of last Tuesday (June 15), when copper's mini-meltdown had only just begun.

Given the prevalence of automated momentum-tracking trading on the CME contract, the reduction in long positions may well have accelerated further as copper broke through several chart support areas towards the end of the week.

The exit of fund managers from the copper market has been playing out on both sides of the Atlantic.

LME broker Marex Spectron estimates speculative length on the London market has imploded from a multi-year high of 62% of open interest in February to a current 10% after five straight weeks of reduction.

Analysts at Citi think the collective investor withdrawal from the copper market since February has amounted to 1.4 million tonnes, which goes a long way to explaining the lack of participation at recent price levels.