At this price, a long way from common cents
Vanessa Burrow
March 17, 2007
THE MARKETS
WHEN the chief executive of the Royal Australian Mint next orders a batch of 10¢ coins, she's going to have a distinct problem.
That's because the price of nickel, which makes up 25 per cent of our 5¢, 10¢, 20¢ and 50¢ coins, has more than tripled in the past year.
The shiny metal has been selling this week for $US50,075 a tonne on the London Metals Exchange, up more than $US5000 a tonne from last week's $US45,050 close.
And, according to the Mint's annual report, in 2005-06 it produced 546 million coins for circulation, a large proportion of which were 75 per cent copper and 25 per cent nickel.
http://www.theage.com.au/news/business/at-this-price-a-long-way-from-common-cents/2007/03/16/1173722748422.html
One and two dollar coins will be a little less troublesome. They're 92 per cent copper, with a little aluminium and nickel.
But the price of copper has also been on the rise. After a slump early this year, the spot price has again pushed above $US6500 a tonne, or about $US3 a pound.
"I think we are probably getting towards a level at which consumers who've been conspicuous by their activity of late, particularly those in China, might start to reconsider whether they'll continue to buy at prices above $US3 a pound," said Deutsche Bank chief metals economist Peter Richardson.
There's a similar reluctance in the nickel market with stainless steel producers, which are concentrated in China, Japan, Western Europe and North America, looking to reduce the amount of nickel in their product.
"Stainless steel mills are clearly very worried by the impact on their alloying costs as a result of these increase in nickel prices," Mr Richardson said.
However, Australian nickel producers such are Minara Resources, Jervois Mining and Southern Cross Exploration are beneficiaries of the latest price jump.
On a day when the market was in the red by 16.7 points, or 0.3 per cent, on the S&P/ASX 200 Index, Minara rose 9¢ to $6.29, Jervois Mining had a 3.2 per cent increase to 3.2¢ and Southern Cross Exploration rose 12.3 per cent to 7.3¢.
But ABN Amro chief economist Kieran Davies said prices of Australia's most important commodity exports were stable.
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