Thứ ba, 10/12/2013
Rubber Near 11-Week High Amid Optimism About Chinese Consumption
Rubber traded near an 11-week high
before data that may show growth in Chinese industrial
production held above 10 percent, adding to speculation demand
from the world’s largest consumer will pick up.
Futures for delivery in May on the Tokyo Commodity Exchange
traded little changed at 281 yen a kilogram ($2,720 a metric
ton) at 10:23 a.m. after rising 0.5 percent and dropping 0.2
percent. The most-active contract settled at 281.1 yen
yesterday, the highest level since Sept. 20.
China will release factory output and retail sales today
after data from the General Administration of Customs in Beijing
showed the nation’s natural-rubber imports jumped to a record.
China’s economic growth may accelerate to 7.8 percent in 2014
from 7.7 percent this year, Shanghai Securities News reported,
citing a forecast from the National Academy of Economic Strategy
under the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
“China raised rubber purchases to replenish stockpiles,
giving support to futures,” said Hideshi Matsunaga, an analyst
at broker Evolution Japan Co. in Tokyo.
China’s imports of natural rubber rose to 270,000 tons last
month, data showed Dec. 8. That’s 42 percent higher from October
and up 25 percent from the same period last year. Purchases in
the first 11 months climbed 8.2 percent to 2.13 million tons.
The contract for May delivery on the Shanghai Futures
Exchange was little changed at 19,825 yuan ($3,265) a ton. Thai
rubber free-on-board added 0.6 percent to 82.45 baht ($2.57) a
kilogram yesterday, according to the Rubber Research Institute
of Thailand. Thai markets are closed today for a holiday.
Source: http://www.bloomberg.com