Nickel came off two-year highs on Tuesday as investors booked profits from a rally that was supported by a low dollar and an improving demand and supply outlook. Benchmark LME nickel ended 3.3 percent lower at $13,350 ounces. The metal, which is also used in electric vehicle batteries, touched $14,040 per tonne on Monday, its highest since May 2015.
"Base metals are down across the board and there has not been much reason for nickel to have been up in the first place," said Societe Generale metals specialist Robin Bhar. He said the move lower was likely an unwinding of the speculative buying that pushed nickel higher last week. But he added that rising demand and falling stocks meant fundamentals for the metal were gradually improving.
Nickel jumped 7.3 percent last week, making it the best performing base metal. On-warrant LME inventories of nickel, those not earmarked for delivery, fell to their lowest level in 2018 at 250,920 tonnes. Funds have raised their bets on prices rising, with LME net long nickel positions rising to 47,708 lots on January 26, the highest since January 2017.
The dollar gave back earlier gains on Tuesday after US yields pulled back from recent highs. A weaker greenback makes dollar-denominated assets cheaper for holders of other currencies. Nickel output by First Quantum Minerals fell 24 percent to 17,837 tonnes last year from 23,624 tonnes in 2016, the company said in a preliminary production and sales report on Friday.
Investors were keeping an eye out for positive signals about infrastructure building in the State of the Union address by US President Donald Trump later in the day. Norwegian aluminium maker Norsk Hydro plans to transfer energy-saving technology from a pilot project to primary smelters in the next five to six years, boosting output and cutting costs, the company's head of technology told Reuters.
Aluminium ended 0.8 percent lower at $2,207 after touching its lowest in nearly two weeks, while tin shed 1.4 percent to $21,625 and lead slipped 0.4 percent to $2,592. Zinc was down 1.5 percent to $3,496 a tonne, having touched $3,584, its highest since July 2007, on Monday. Copper edged down 0.5 percent at $7,050 a tonne after slipping to its lowest in a week.
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