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30 Jun 2009
Beijing has suspended buying non-ferrous metals for state reserves after government stockpiling led to a surge in prices, Chinese media has reported. China has been building its inventories of metals, including 235,000 tonnes of copper, over recent months,
Caijing magazine reported on its website over the weekend, citing Yu
Dongming, an official with the state economic planner. China also
bought 590,000 tonnes of aluminium, 159,000 tonnes of zinc, 30 tonnes
of indium and 5,000 tonnes of titanium, said Yu, who works in the
National Development and Reform Commission's industry department. "In
the current market situation, aluminium firms have already started to
make profits and non-ferrous metals prices have rebounded," he was
quoted as saying. "It's had the expected effect and, given these
circumstances, we don't expect the state will continue to build its
reserves." Yu added that middlemen, rather than domestic companies that
the government intended to support, had unexpectedly become "the
biggest beneficiary" of Beijing's buying spree. China has been buying
up crude oil, copper, coal and a host of other key raw materials
despite the financial slump having slashed demand for the exports
responsible for the Asian giant's once ravenous appetite. The State
Reserve Bureau has been stockpiling, but so too have producers,
distributors and other speculators hoping to profit from an expected
rise in prices once the world economy starts to recover, analysts say.
Source: AFP