COLUMN-Copper stocks battle resumes, but the real action is elsewhere: Andy Home

(Repeats with no changes. The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters)

* LME Copper Stock Arrivals: http://tmsnrt.rs/2EqkQ5i

* LME Copper Stocks: http://tmsnrt.rs/2EnQu3F

By Andy Home

LONDON, Jan 30 (Reuters) - You don't get much market bang for 100,000 tonnes of copper these days.

Or 101,725 tonnes to be precise, which is the amount of metal that was dumped into the London Metal Exchange (LME) warehouse network over just four days last week.

LME copper had closed the previous week at $7,041 per tonne and, after surviving a Tuesday swoon to $6,885, it closed last Friday at $7,085.

True, the bear attack was partly thwarted by U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin's ambivalent comments on the dollar, which went into its own tailspin, lifting the whole commodity complex.

But the LME "Street" seemed to have seen this copper surge coming.

And the rest of us have seen it all before anyway. Last week's stocks dump was the sixth such LME "arrivals event" in the space of 14 months.

The bull-bear physical arm-wrestling match resumes, it seems.

However, the noise of combat in the LME copper stocks arena is drowning out an ever more significant shift in global inventory distribution.

There are now 113,098 tonnes of copper sitting in CME-registered warehouses in Salt Lake City in Utah.

It's a curious place for so much copper to be stored but one with major potential consequences.

Graphic on LME copper stock arrivals:

http://tmsnrt.rs/2EqkQ5i

Graphic on LME copper stocks:

http://tmsnrt.rs/2EnQu3F

SIGNAL FAILURE

Human nature being what it is, it's always tempting to try and explain such a change in visible inventory with reference to some equally dramatic shift in market dynamics.

But before you do, check out a chart of headline LME copper stocks over the last two years. The latest injection of physical metal is but the latest addition to a violent zig-zag pattern.

The six "arrival events" since December 2016 have all been super-charged inflows of copper to the LME system concentrated into the space of just a few days.

This one was little different from the others with most of the tonnage hitting the same Asian and Dutch locations as before.

And the Street was quick to see it for what it was, one broker warning clients after Monday's first hit of "a planned market play" involving around 100,000 tonnes of warrantings and a tranche of put options.

Based on the price evidence, the bull seems to have held his ground, albeit with considerable assistance from the U.S. Treasury Secretary.

And if past form holds, expect the bull to do what he has done every time in the past, namely buy all the newly delivered metal, cancel it and ship it, most likely to China.