Mon, May 28, 2012, 8:11 AM EDT - U.S. Markets closed for Memorial Day

Copper prices jump on improving US jobs market

Copper prices jump on improving US jobs market, factory orders; other commodities are mixed

Copper prices jumped 3.2 percent Friday after a sharp improvement in the U.S. job market and higher factory orders raised hopes for stronger demand.

The move ended an erratic week of small price losses and gains for the industrial metal as investors looked for clues about what's ahead for the global economy in a slew of economic reports from several countries. Copper can be an indicator of economic health because it is used in a wide range of products from consumer electronics to pipes and wires.

The government said 243,000 jobs were added in January across a broad array of industries. Manufacturing alone added 50,000 jobs, the most in a year. January's unemployment rate dropped to 8.3 percent and factory orders rose 1.1 percent in December.

Separately, a trade group said service companies grew at the fastest pace in 11 months in January as companies hired workers to keep up with demand.

The data pointed to an improving U.S. economy which is "the bottom line" for industrial metals like copper, said Matt Zeman, a Kingsview Financial analyst.

However, copper prices likely will remain choppy in the near term because of concerns about a slower economy in China, which is a huge importer of the metal, he said. The other unknown factor is how much of an impact Europe's debt crisis will have on the global economy.

Copper for March delivery rose 12.05 cents to finish at $3.9015 per pound. That's up 2 percent since Monday and 10.6 percent for the year.

In other trading, gold for April delivery fell $19 to finish at $1,740.30 an ounce and March silver declined 42.6 cents to $33.749 per ounce. April platinum rose $2 to end at $1,631.90 per ounce and March palladium increased $1.20 to $708.85 per ounce.

In other trading, benchmark oil rose $1.48 to finish at $97.84 per barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Heating oil increased 6.15 cents to end at $3.1144 per gallon, gasoline futures rose 4.55 cents to $2.9144 per gallon and natural gas fell 5.5 cents to $2.499 per 1,000 cubic feet.

In March agriculture contracts, wheat fell 2 cents to finish at $6.6075 per bushel, corn rose 1.5 cents to $6.445 per bushel and soybeans increased 15.5 cents to $12.325 per bushel.

 

15 comments

  • Bryan  •  3 months ago
    How come the artticle directly across frrom this one-in the same list-states copper prices falling? Copper prices falling on economic growth question or copper prices jump on US jobs reportt-take your pick. Lunatics.
  • tony m  •  3 months ago
    If you subscribe to this theroy - then the job market must be improving because the price of food, gas, healthcare and everything else is going up. Oh wait, my paycheck isn't going up. Oh wait again...I don't even have a job. But the job market and the economy must be improving because the government keeps telling me it is..so it must be true.
    • Tony 3 months ago
      If you have zero income, you can tell people your income jumped 100 percent but still stays the same !
    • tony m 3 months ago
      That makes no sense. Do you believe everything the government tells you? Right now, I believe nothing they tell me. I fact check all articles and 99.999% of the time the government is lying or manipulating the facts to make them reflect what they want the American people to believe.
  • Tony  •  3 months ago
    Copper prices go up, theft of copper goes up.
    Better put a barb-wire fence around your air conditioner units.
    The thieves will rip them off their concrete pads or will pull window units out.
  • wcap84  •  Las Vegas, Nevada  •  3 months ago
    Right nest to this story..is this story line;Metals fall on weak consumer confidence...the media and the administration are ALL full of sht!!!
  • EmployedWhiteMale  •  3 months ago
    So am I supposed to be happy that everything is costing MORE? It's a good sign? We started down this road of economic ruin when speculators drove the price of crude oil up and oil companies extorted Americans at the pumps. Every freakin' thing you buy is tied to diesel fuel; whether it gets to you from a train or a truck, it costs money in diesel to get it there. The oil companies are raping us. Everytime somebody farts in the middle east or the wind hits 10 knots in the Gulf of Mexico we're told that "instability" of some kind is responsible. I could believe that if I didn't see reports every quarter where oil companies post record profits. If the government wants to recover the economy, they need to cut fuel taxes and drop the price of fuel so everything at the grocery store will cost less and people will be able to take day trips and vacations without having to break the bank.
    Personally, I belive the Obama administration is intentionally inactive on the issue in an attempt to coerce Americans into buying hybrids.
    • Tony 3 months ago
      Why are you blaming Obama ?
      .
      Congress passed the Commodities Futurization Act in 2000, which allowed corporations like Goldman Sachs to hide their involvement in speculating much longer than before. The Republican Party was in control of the House of Representatives, and the Senate, and Bill Clinton was part of that scam from the beginning. Wall Street wanted regulation on themselves reduced, and they got it.
      .
      There are also speculators in Switzerland, where US laws can't touch them.
  • Dave  •  Goodlettsville, Tennessee  •  3 months ago
    Copper prices are in no way related to the job market....fools.
  • yawho!  •  3 months ago
    I wouldn't get to excited until after the election. If the incumbent gets reelected it's bonds for me.
    • Ryan 3 months ago
      Thats a sound strategy. I mean at these levels, rates have room to move down, and its not like the monetary policy is loose or anything, your bonds should do very well if inflation hits. Would you like to buy from me? I'll short, er, I mean, sell them to you...
  • Jim  •  Seattle, Washington  •  3 months ago
    Typical AP and Obama propaganda.
  • 411  •  3 months ago
    Keep drinking the kool aid sheeple....this pig is set to explode
    • TheMiddleWay 3 months ago
      The titanic is rising. You are stupid.
  • ....................  •  3 months ago
    wallstreet speculating crooks, making more copper stealing redneck meth crooks....build a fence around your a/c...!
  • The Answer is 42  •  3 months ago
    The Baltic Dry Index caved in and it seems to have hit bottom, but the EU is diving into a massive recession right now and Greece is going to kill the EU with their intransigence so I see the Baltic Dry Index continue to fall off the cliff. As for base metals (manufacturing metals), all of them are increasing in prices. (Forget copper, that has been grabbed by the speculators so it has no bearing on actual manufacturing activity). The bizarre thing is lead is taking off like a rocket. What the heck is lead used for now days? Batteries for electric cars? Lead paint in China? Oh, wait, ammunition. Oh, oh oh, (goes away to Google some results)... ...ammunition sales are skyrocketing across the entire globe, duh, of course...
  • Vlad the Impaler  •  3 months ago
    What a joke!!
  • Ggg  •  3 months ago
    lol, kiss the copper industry goodbye, alternatives will be used once customers feel the price gauge again.
  • Deepsix  •  Norwalk, Connecticut  •  3 months ago
    Don't get too excited. My lawyer tells me there is a storm surge of lis pendins on defaulted mortgages. A Titanic backlog of forclosures ahead. With more tax increases planned by the Obama for his Entitlement Nation, I see more crumbling cites such as the Detroit cancer spreading.
    • The_Mick 3 months ago
      Deepsix, don't be so pessimistic. You're going on what your lawyer says -surely about local problems? What tax increases are planned by Obama except on those paying low rates because of current loopholes? NONE! But note that the GOP House made sure it got rid of the Making Work tax break for the Middle Class in Jan. 2011!
    • Tony 3 months ago
      Everyone in the real estate business knows about the defaulted mortgages, the real problem is the clouded titles caused by the banks and mortgage processors who didn't do their jobs correctly. No one who invests in real estate will buy any property with a clouded title. So the banks who currently "own" the foreclosed properties are stuck with those properties !!
  • Denisse  •  3 months ago
    I'm sure you will like this website goldtradingacademy offer a great deal to success.
 
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