Monday, April 16, 2012

COMMODITIES-Euro zone woes fuel risk aversion Copper at 3-month low


Copper at 3-month low, platinum at weakest in more than 2 months
* Firmer dollar also weighing, euro hits one-month trough
* Coming Up: U.S. New York Fed Empire State Survey; 1230 GMT
By Manolo Serapio Jr
SINGAPORE, April 16 (Reuters) - Commodities slid on Monday, with copper hitting fresh three-month lows and oil and grains also in the red, as worries about the global economy from China to Europe pushed investors out of risky assets.
Gold, otherwise a safe haven, fell too, as the dollar strengthened with rising Spanish bond yields renewing fears about the debt-plagued euro zone, and platinum sank to its lowest since January.
Worries about Spain, China's slowest first-quarter economic expansion in nearly three years and growing doubts about a U.S. economic recovery have combined to fuel aversion to risk assets.
"There's not much optimism out there. We think the second quarter should be the low point of this cycle as far as economic growth is concerned," said Jeremy Friesen, commodity strategist at Societe Generale.
Investors may be stepping back from markets, waiting for central banks from the United States, Europe and even China to boost their economies through more policy stimulus, he said.
Market players shrugged off China's weekend move to let the yuan trade more freely against the dollar, which economists say suggests Beijing is optimistic the economy is strong enough to withstand currency movements.
That vote of confidence, however, was not enough to allay the pessimism fueled by Friday's data showing that China, the world's No. 2 economy, grew an annual 8.1 percent in the first quarter, less than the 8.3 percent economists were looking for.
"The weaker than expected Chinese data appears to be the key driver of the market right now," said Tetsu Emori, a Tokyo-based commodities fund manager at Astmax Investments.
Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange fell nearly 1 percent to a three-month low of $7,915 a tonne, adding to a 2.8-percent slide on Friday.
By 0334 GMT, LME copper was down 0.7 percent at $7,931.50, taking its Shanghai counterpart with it. Benchmark Shanghai copper fell as low as 56,700 yuan, its weakest since Jan. 11.
More on the story at
reuter markets-commodities

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