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This Article is From Dec 29, 2023

Nickel Is Year’s Biggest Metals Loser, Copper Manages Small Gain

Nickel Is Year’s Biggest Metals Loser, Copper Manages Small Gain
Copper-nickel ore moves along a conveyor belt at the Talnakh concentrator plant, operated by MMC Norilsk Nickel PJSC, in Norilsk, Russia, on Wednesday, Oct. 18, 2017. Norilsk Nickel, which mines the rich deposits of nickel, copper and palladium near Norilsk, has spent 2.5 billion rubles ($40 million) to lay fiber-optic cabling in the Siberian tundra. Photographer: Andrey Rudakov/Bloomberg
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In a mostly lackluster year for metals trading, nickel emerged as the worst performer and might not see a reprieve anytime soon.

The metal used in stainless steel and electric vehicle batteries is poised to post an annual drop of more than 40% on the London Metal Exchange, the worst decline since 2008. That's by far the worst outcome among industrial metals, and contrasts with a 3% gain for copper or with iron ore's advance of about 20% in Singapore.

Metals have been pressured throughout this year by global economic headwinds and uncertainty over China's growth outlook. The LME's all-in gauge of six metals is down more than 5% for the year, and set for a second annual decline.

In most cases, concerns over tightening supply or even shortages have proved unfounded or perhaps premature. But those worries were particularly true for nickel, a market that's been flooded with a wave of new material from top producer Indonesia. Demand growth has also faded.

“Nickel supply continues to grow, but consumption is showing no sign of improvement,” Huatai Futures analysts wrote in a note posted on its website.

Copper's annual gain comes after a fourth-quarter rebound, helped by optimism that the Federal Reserve will start cutting interest rates next year. Prices will hit $10,000 a ton within 12 months, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. said in a Dec. 18 note.

Metals were little changed in thin trading on the final working day of 2023. 

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

©2023 Bloomberg L.P.

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