• Home

  • Rubber

  • Plastic

  • Contact

Search:

Jul 29: Rubber Climbs to Two-Week High On Speculation China Demand to Keep Growing

Rubber advanced to a two-week high on speculation that demand in China, the world’s largest consumer, will keep growing after Sumitomo Rubber Industries Ltd. said it will expand tire output in the nation.

Futures in Tokyo climbed as much as 2.1 percent to the highest level since July 12. The price has gained 1.4 percent in July, heading for the first monthly advance since March.

Sumitomo Rubber, Japan’s second-largest tire maker after Bridgestone Corp., will invest $297 million to set up a factory in Hunan province, the company said in a statement yesterday. It will be the company’s second factory in China and start production in July 2012, it said.

“The news added to expectations that China’s raw-material demand will continue to grow, backed by a rapid expansion in the nation’s economy,” Hisaaki Tasaka, an analyst at broker ACE Koeki Co. in Tokyo, said today by phone.

January-delivery rubber increased as much as 5.7 yen to 274.3 yen per kilogram ($3,138 a metric ton) on the Tokyo Commodity Exchange before settling at 272.9 yen.

Gains in futures were limited as Asian stocks extended a global decline after the Federal Reserve said U.S. economic growth slowed in some areas, raising concern that the recovery of the world’s largest economy may weaken.

“Economic activity has continued to increase, on balance, since the previous survey,” the central bank said in its Beige Book business survey, noting that two of the Fed’s 12 districts reported the economy “held steady” and two said the pace of expansion slowed.

‘Unusually Uncertain’

The report underscored the Fed’s view that the recovery, while still moving forward, is progressing at a slower pace than earlier in the year. Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said in congressional testimony last week that the central bank expects “continued moderate growth” and noted that the economic outlook remains “unusually uncertain.”

Low inventory levels in China and Japan continued to provide support to rubber prices, said Roka Komiya, a rubber trader at Marubeni Corp. in Singapore. “That is the factor driving gains of nearby contracts,” he said.

In the cash market, Thai prices extended gains as heavy rains in the nation’s rubber-growing southern provinces limited supply, according to the Rubber Research Institute of Thailand. The price rose 1 percent to 103.4 baht ($3.21) per kilogram.

January-delivery rubber on the Shanghai Futures Exchange gained 1.8 percent to close at 23,735 yuan ($3,503) a ton.

Source: Bloomberg

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook

« Jul 28: Rubber in Tokyo at Two-Week High as Asian Equities Rally Boosts Appeal
Aug 2: Rubber Gains to Five-Week High as Japan Stockpiles Fall to Nine-Year Low »

This entry was posted on Thursday, July 29th, 2010 at 8:12 pm and is filed under Rubber News. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

Comments are closed.


  • Useful Links

    • Physical FOB Price
    • SHFE Rubber Price
    • SICOM Rubber Price
    • TOCOM Rubber Price
www.uyong.com
© copyright 2008
Entries (RSS)