LONDON, Nov 30 (Reuters) – Copper prices steadied on Friday ahead of a meeting of global leaders at the G20 summit, where a long-standing trade dispute between China and the United States is expected to take centre stage. Tit-for-tat trade tariffs have rattled global markets and sapped demand for base metals, in some cases overriding supportive factors such as falling stocks. “The market is, to a great extent, discounting the chance of a breakthrough in talks between the U.S. and China over the weekend,” said Commerzbank’s head of commodities research Eugen Weinberg, adding that Chinese data added to the general lacklustre performance of metals on Friday. China’s official Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) fell to a 2016 low of 50 in November, missing market expectations and down from 50.2 in October. Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange (LME) was up 0.3 percent at $6,230 a tonne in official rings after dipping in early trade. Aluminium slipped 0.1 percent to $1,938. Aluminium in London and on the Shanghai Futures Exchange (ShFE) was on track for its third straight month of declines.
TRADE DEAL: U.S. President Donald Trump, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Mexico President Enrique Pena Nieto signed a new trade agreement on Friday known as the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA).
CHALCO SUPPLY CUTS: Aluminum Corp of China (Chalco) is cutting 470,000 tonnes of annual output, it said on Friday as Chinese aluminium prices sank to a two-year low.
ALUMINIUM: Norwegian metals company Norsk Hydro expects global primary aluminium demand growth to slow next year and says it is being hit hard by a production slowdown at a key alumina plant in Brazil.
ZINC SPREADS: Falling stocks pushed the premium for cash zinc over the three month price to $101 a tonne, its highest since 1998. CMZN0-3
STOCKS: Inventories of zinc in LME-monitored warehouses are close to a 10-year low of 88,600 tonnes. In warehouses monitored by ShFE, zinc stocks fell 25 percent from last Friday to 26,779 tonnes. CODELCO: Chile’s Codelco, the world’s largest copper producer, said mine output fell 3 percent in the first nine months of the year as ore grades fell sharply.
STEEL: The United States is moving to moderate its steel trade tariffs but countries in Europe and beyond are wary of reducing protection for their steelmakers while U.S.-China trade tensions prevail.