Tokyo rubber futures climb

12 Sep, 2012

Tokyo rubber futures rose to their highest in more than a month on Tuesday on lingering hopes that China and the United States would take further steps to stimulate their economies. The benchmark rubber contract on the Tokyo Commodity Exchange for February delivery rose 0.6 yen to settle at 236.9 yen ($3.03) per kg.
It rose to an intra-day high of 240.6 yen, the highest since July 23, before profit-taking set in. The most-active rubber contract on the Shanghai futures exchange for January delivery was up 245 yuan to finish at 23,290 yuan ($3,700) per tonne. The front-month rubber contract on Singapore's SICOM exchange for October delivery was last traded at $2.67 per kg, up 1.3 cents.
"Market players were still hopeful that there would be some measure to boost economies and demand after the Fed meeting. However, the rise in TOCOM prices was still capped by profit-taking," said a Bangkok-based dealer. Rubber inventories in key Shanghai warehouses doubled from a month ago to reach its highest in over a year.

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