Thursday 9 January 2014

Tencent’s Personal Cloud Storage Service Micro Cloud Releases 2.0 Version

Chinese Internet giant Tencent recently released version 2.0 for its personal cloud storage Micro Cloud   with a number of features that aims to turn the product into an integration service from a storage service. The new 2.0 version is expected to hit market on January 15 
Tencent also announced that Micro Cloud registered more than 300 million users as of present, just seven months after the service hit 100 million user milestone in May 2013.
In addition to storing pictures, videos and audios, the revamped Micro Cloud 2.0 allows users to save websites, files, and notes via the service. All forms of documents saved on Micro Cloud are being synchronized across multiple devices, enabling users to check, edit and share them on different terminals.
Tencent also integrated Micro Cloud to other document sharing products under the company, like QQ Offline Transmission, QQ Mail, QQ Album, among others.
Tencent is in talks with hardware manufacturers to embed Micro Cloud into smartphones and wearable devices via pre-installation or API access, said Ji Shunyou, deputy manager of Tencent Cloud Platform.
Ji added that Micro Cloud will continue the tie-ups with WeChat and aims to become one part of the solution plan for WeChat public accounts.
Tencent rolled out Micro Cloud in July 2012 with four components include a cloud-based storage disk; a photo album; a Wi-Fi hotspot transfer feature and a cross-device clipboard feature.
Micro Cloud started to offer a jaw-dropping 10TB of free cloud storage from August 2013, when leading cloud storage companies waged a cloud storage war  back then.
Chinese IT triumvirate known as BAT (Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent) all laid out in personal cloud storage sector. Alibaba acquired leading domestic cloud storage service Kanbox in September last year. Baidu Cloud announced 100 million users last September and established partnership with storage solution provider Western Digital in last December.

Source: TechNode

Toyota's Aqua top-selling car in Japan in 2013

Toyota Motor's Aqua hybrid compact car was the top-selling vehicle in Japan in 2013.
The Japan Automobile Dealers Association and the Japan Mini Vehicles Association on Thursday announced the number of new vehicles sold in Japan last year.A total of 262,367 Aqua cars were sold.
Toyota's Prius hybrid came second, with 253,711 units. The Prius had been the best-selling car for 4 years in a row until 2012.
Honda Motor's N-BOX minicar came third with 234,994 units.
Source:NewsOnJapan

Criminal complaint against Novartis' Tokyo arm

Japan's health ministry has filed a criminal complaint against a local arm of Swiss-based drug maker Novartis over its use of manipulated clinical data in its advertisements.
The ministry filed the complaint with the Tokyo District Public Prosecutor's office on Thursday against Novartis Pharma and its officials in charge of advertising.It alleges the company violated Japan's pharmaceutical affairs law with exaggerated advertising for its blood pressure-lowering drug known as Diovan over 2 years through 2012.
Studies on the effect of the drug were found to contain manipulated data. A former employee of Novartis Pharma was involved in studies conducted at several Japanese universities.

Source: NHK

France, Japan vow to strengthen defence ties amid China spat

France and Japan vowed Thursday to strengthen their military ties, as Tokyo seeks French support in its long-running spat with Beijing over disputed islands that has raised fresh tensions.

Both China and Japan claim a set of islands in the East China Sea -- Diaoyu in Chinese and Senkaku in Japanese -- as their own territory, and the escalating row has raised concerns that the two countries could eventually come to blows.
"We want to put in place concrete actions... to reinforce defence technology and industry in both (our) countries," French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said at a joint press conference with his Japanese counterpart Fumio Kishida, after they held their first so-called "2+2" meeting along with their countries' defence ministers.
French Defence Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said the two nations planned to cooperate in areas such as the latest generation helicopters, drones and submarines.
Kishida was in France after a trip to Spain, as Japan strives to gain a greater presence on the world stage.
It has already held "2+2" meetings with the United States, Australia and Russia, and is now actively wooing France and Spain to help expand its clout in Africa and Latin America.

Source: NewsOnJapan

China's 2013 exports rise 7.9 pct, imports up 7.3 pct

China's exports rose 7.9 percent year on year to 2.21 trillion U.S. dollars in 2013, while imports increased 7.3 percent to 1.95 trillion U.S. dollars, customs data revealed on Friday.
Foreign trade surplus widened to 259.75 billion U.S. dollars in 2013, an increase of 12.8 percent from a year earlier.
Last year, the country's total exports and imports value surpassed the 4-trillion-U.S.-dollar-mark for the first time to reach 4.16 trillion U.S. dollars, an increase of 7.6 percent year on year.
Source: Xinhua

China's role in Middle East will be enhanced. Foreign Minister Wang Yi interviewed by Al Jazeera

I. You have concluded your first visit to five countries, namely, Palestine, Israel, Algeria, Morocco 
and Saudi Arabia. What is the purpose of this visit? How do you evaluate the outcome of this visit?
Wang Yi: This is my very first visit to the Middle East region as the foreign minister of China's new government. The trip has three goals: namely, to carry forward friendly relations; to deepen existing cooperation; and to promote peace talks.
China and the Arab states enjoy time-honored ties of friendship, forged by the 2,000-year old Silk Road. In modern times, China has firmly supported Arab states in their cause to win national independence and liberation. China is committed to carrying forward this traditional friendship. My Middle East trip has achieved this goal completely, as I have felt for myself the profound goodwill of the Arab states and their peoples for China and the Chinese people.
China works hard to deepen its cooperation with the countries in the region for mutual benefit. Last year, two-way trade reached nearly $300 billion, with China becoming the top trading partner of many Arab states. According to rough statistics, China's accumulated contractual value in the region totaled $120 billion, including a substantial input in infrastructure, such as roads, bridges and factories. More recently, China's direct investment in the region has grown rapidly. Already standing at $10 billion in accumulative terms, it keeps increasing with an incredible speed.
The Third Plenum of the 18th Communist Party of China Central Committee held not long ago, which made important arrangements on the comprehensive deepening of reform and opening-up, will bring about fresh and important opportunities for the cooperation between China and the countries in the region. China plans to develop a Silk Road economic belt that spans the Eurasia continent and a maritime Silk Road that links the Pacific with the Indian Ocean. We can see on a map that the two Silk Roads will cross in the Middle East region, which spells excellent opportunities and bright prospects for common development and common prosperity for China and the region's countries. During the visit, I discussed many new ideas and new plans of cooperation with Arab leaders. China is ready to share its experience in high-speed rail development with any country and participate in national rail network.
Source: ChinaDaily 


China stocks open lower on Friday

Chinese stocks opened lower on Friday, with the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index opening 0.20 percent lower at 2,023.54 points.
The Shenzhen Component Index fell 0.30 percent to open at 7,723.74 points.
Source: Xinhua

China: Analysts weigh in on effects of reform in 2014

Although the reforms, whose goal is a more sustainable development model, are viewed as ultimately positive for the Chinese economy, this year may be too soon to see concrete results, many experts said.
Instead, the market is likely to see modifications, especially in industries plagued by overcapacity, said Pu Yonghao, regional chief investment officer at UBS AG.
"Although we are happy about the message sent out by the Third Plenary Session, one must be aware that, in the short to mid-term, there is still much to be done to address China's structural problems."
"Short-term pressure on GDP growth is undeniable, as the new leadership has put structural reform at the top of its to-do list," Pu said.
He added that while stock market fluctuation is sure to come, many sectors — especially heavily polluting ones — will be reshuffled.
"It has yet to affect the listed companies, but smaller ones, such as tiny steel mills in the northern provinces, are shutting down."
He cautioned that if the market is going to play a "decisive" role in the economy, as cited by the reformative plan, investors should be aware that freer competition also can lead to negative results such as bankruptcy.
"We should be aware of the risks stemming from the reform," he cautioned.
The recent reform blueprint has been called the boldest package of policies seen in decades in China. On the economic front, it vows to reduce the level of government intervention to let the market play a decisive role in the allocation of resources. The plan also sets liberalization of interest rates, SOE reform and urbanization as key themes.
In a December report, Standard Chartered Bank Plc called 2014 a "make or break year" when it will be vital for China's new leadership, which assumed office in March, to effectively implement the economic reforms.
The bank forecast 7.4 percent real GDP growth in 2014 for the nation, with growth in the first half slightly stronger than in the trailing half.
But the report also stressed that "the net impact of reform on short-term growth is tricky to call" as the People's Bank of China, the country's central bank, begins its attempt to deleverage the economy.
"We expect bank loans to grow 11 percent in 2014 to 8.5 trillion yuan ($1.4 trillion), slowing from 14 percent growth in 2013," the Standard Chartered report said.
"Non-bank credit growth is also likely to slow. Total credit growth is highly likely to remain above nominal GDP growth, so 2014 will be a year of more gradual leveraging up. We expect deleveraging to kick in only in 2015-16."
That echoes the forecast of UBS.
"We estimate that the growth rate of aggregate financing to the real economy will slow down gradually in 2014," Pu said, adding that in the aftermath of the 4 trillion yuan stimulus package in 2008, credit has grown twice as fast as GDP in China.
"That leads to low efficiency of credit and a bubble in various industries. So, there is room for the central bank to tighten credit."
In the face of an asset bubble and shadow banking, the central bank curtailed funding for the interbank lending market, boosting the overnight Shanghai offered rate was as high as 13 percent. Otherwise, the rate is usually in the rage of 2 to 3 percent.
Earlier in December, the benchmark interbank rate soared again to above 8 percent, adding tension to the financial market. In response, the central bank injected more than 300 billion yuan through short-term liquidity operations on Dec 20, followed by another 29 billion yuan through a reverse-repurchase agreement on Dec 24.
As interbank rates declined, the PBOC canceled the regular seven-day reverse-repurchase operation on Dec 31.
But the central government faces a dilemma in taming runaway credit growth, as it could harm the economy if it clamps down too fast or too hard.
"By and large, credit will be tight next year," said Shen Minggao, head of China research for Citibank, which forecasts a 7.3 percent GDP growth for the country in 2014.
"The cost of capital is already rising in China, and the trend is likely to continue," Shen said.
Source: ChinaDaily,by Emma Dai. Hong Kong

Chinese state leaders offer condolences to Run Run Shaw

Chinese President Xi Jinping, top legislator Zhang Dejiang and other state leaders on Thursday sent their messages of condolence to the family of Hong Kong media mogul and philanthropist Run Run Shaw who died on Tuesday at 107.
Xi said in his message that Shaw loved the country for his whole life, concerned for the well-being of the people and had made generous donations which have benefited many people. Shaw's patriotism and aspiration will be remembered by the people.
Zhang said Shaw had devoted himself to the cause of serving the country with patriotism, and maintained prosperity and stability of Hong Kong. Shaw was also warmhearted in promoting public welfare which will bring benefit to future generations.
China's retired state leaders also sent their condolences on Thursday, including former premiers Zhu Rongji and Wen Jiabao, former members of the Standing Committee of the Communist Party of China Central Committee Li Lanqing and Li Changchun, as well as former vice chairman of National Committee of Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference and also former director of State Council's Hong Kong and Macao Affairs Office Liao Hui.
The incumbent director of State Council's Hong Kong and Macao Affairs Office Wang Guangya, director of State Administration of Press, Publication, Radio, Film and Television Cai Fuchao, party chief of the southwestern Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region Peng Qinghua, director of Liaison Office of the Central People's Government in Macao Li Gang, former director of State Council's Hong Kong and Macao Affairs Office Lu Ping and former deputy directors Chen Zuo'er and Chen Ziying also sent their condolences or conveyed their sympathy.
Zhang Xiaoming, director of Liaison Office of the Central People's Government in Hong Kong, came to the mourning hall for Shaw at Hong Kong Funeral Home. Zhang delivered messages of Xi Jinping and Zhang Dejiang to Shaw's wife and the eldest son. Zhang conveyed other state leaders' condolences and sympathy.
Zhang also bowed to a portrait of Run Run Shaw at the mourning hall and expressed his condolence to Shaw's relatives.

China: Political advisors urge safe development of nuclear power

China's national political advisors on Thursday called for steadily promoting the development of nuclear electric power and clean energies while ensuring security.
Developing nuclear power and clean energies and restructuring energy use are big issues for China's sustainable economic development and environment protection, advisors said at a biweekly symposium of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC).
Yu Zhengsheng, chairman of the CPPCC National Committee, attended the symposium and exchanged ideas with the advisors.
Advisors said that China should optimize the overall layout of nuclear power projects as well as develop hydropower, wind power and photovoltaic power.
Authorities should reinforce nuclear security monitoring and never allow the occurrence of nuclear leaks, the advisors said.
Source: Xinhua

IMF: What are Structural Policies by Khaled Abdel-Kader

The recent financial and sovereign debt crises triggered calls for bold structural policies in several euro area countries, while declining growth in many developed and developing countries pointed to a need for fiscal, financial, institutional, and regulatory reforms to enhance productivity and raise growth and employment. Structural policies not only help raise economic growth; they also set the stage for successful implementation of stabilization policies.

 1 Governments in some countries set the prices for certain goods and services—such as electricity, gas, and communication services—below production costs, particularly when the goods or services are produced by government-owned companies. These price controls lead to losses that the government must make up—which can cause budget and stabilization problems. Moreover, controls encourage higher consumption than would be the case if the prices of goods and services reflected the true cost of production. Price controls lead to missallocation of resources.

2. Complex tax laws and inefficient systems of tax administration, can make it difficult to raise sufficient public revenue, which often leads to large budget deficits and accumulation of debt (a stabilization problem). That in turn can restrict a government’s ability to finance development needs such as health care services, education, and infrastructure projects. Tax reforms can facilitate taxpayer compliance and raise revenue by removing exemptions, requiring advance payment of estimated tax liabilities, and simplifying the tax rate structure. Improved tax administration can also increase revenue.

3.  Government-owned enterprises make up a considerable share of the economy in some countries. Some operate efficiently and in the best interest of consumers. But often, because there is little if any competition, government-owned businesses deliver low-quality goods and services. Public businesses that compete with private firms often operate at a loss because of political influence or higher operating costs (as a result of unneeded workers, for example), and the government must make up the losses. Stabilization problems can arise if these government enterprises have to borrow from commercial banks to cover the losses. The loans are usually guaranteed by the government, which imposes contingent liabilities on the government budget because the government will have to pay if the enterprises don’t.Countries with large state-owned enterprises could sell them to private individuals or firms. Or they could appoint efficient management an run them as private firms operating with profits and in the best interest of the economy.

4.Underdeveloped or poorly regulated financial systems in some developing countries could hamper economic growth and make it more difficult to conduct stabilization policies. 
 Regulated interest rates produces missallocation of resources,these should be market rates.
 Underdeveloped or poorly regulated financial systems in some developing countries could hamper economic growth and make it more difficult to conduct stabilization policies. 
 Inadequately regulated banks may engage in risky behavior that leads to banking crises—such as a “run,” when worried depositors rush en masse to take out their funds, or a failure, which is generally the result of bad lending practices. But even sound banks can fail if they get caught up in a systemwide run that exhausts the cash they have to pay depositors. Banking crises can interrupt the flow of funds to borrowers, discourage saving, and lead to higher government deficits if the state guarantees deposits or recapitalizes.
 To mitigate crises, policymakers must shore up the financial system through effective regulation and supervision.
5.Governments often have programs designed to safeguard a minimum standard of living for the poor and other vulnerable groups. But in many developing countries some costly programs—like fuel and food subsidies—are poorly targeted and benefit the rich more than the poor. 
To focus on the needy, governments could give low-income households vouchers for basic food items or distribute food only in areas where the poor live. The government could also replace food and fuel subsidies with cash transfers. Pension programs can be changed so that benefits are aligned with projected revenues by raising the retirement age or fully funding pension systems.

Source: IMF Finance and Development. Back to basics.

US cold weather conditions slowly easing

According to the National Weather Service, winds are calming and the weather is warming slightly. The shift comes a day after record-low temperatures were recorded up and down the Eastern seaboard. The first extended blizzard warning for New York’s Buffalo area in 20 years was lifted at 6 am local time on Wednesday.
And temperatures finally climbed above freezing across much of Georgia in the southeastern United States.
Source: CCTV

Zinc Price 2014. Interview of the Mining Report to Joseph Galucci. Mr Gallucci has approximately 10 years experience in equity research. He joined Dundee Capital Markets in June 2012 as a senior mining research analyst.

    Dear bloggers this is an interesting interview, and I quote it  for the information it brings about the zinc market in 2o14,where I've already read about a global deficit for this base metal.  I do not share his top pick, because of the dismal results of my junior investments. You should take some time and make your homework about the junior historic chart index from the period 2009-13. 
There are some other zinc producers in the Lima's Stock Exchange,which can bring leverage to a rising price of the metal. At the end of the day, I'm not saying you can't make money with TV,but because of my risk-reward expectations it is not for me.

TMR: Let's look at zinc, which is a metal market that you have studied extensively. What are the commercial applications of zinc?
JG: About 50% of the zinc market is used for galvanizing steel as anti-rust protection for car manufacturing and construction. The biggest buyers are China at 45% and Europe at 20%.
TMR: What's the global supply situation?
"Even a small increase in the price of zinc will generate a big increase in revenue for producers."
JG: The market in the Western world has been in a supply deficit for quite some time, and now, for the first time, it is in a global deficit. And the deficit will only get bigger. The zinc market is quite different from the copper market because about 40% of its production comes from junior miners, whereas in the copper space, juniors only account for about 7% of production. As the big zinc ore bodies are tapped out and the large mines close, they will continue to be replaced by smaller zinc operations. Brunswick was the first to close, and Century, Skorpion and a whole host of other mines are following suit.
TMR: Are companies hoarding zinc in anticipation of higher prices?
JG: Hoarding is definitely an issue. For example, the zinc inventories on the London Metal Exchange (LME) are controlled by four big players. The bulk of their inventory is stored in several warehouse facilities in New Orleans. The metal stores are not readily available for distribution and it is in fact due to the multiple locations that warehousing companies can move product among themselves in an effort to keep queues long. Therefore, queuing issues can cause price increases although it is hard to calculate the extent of the problem at present.
TMR: You have talked about the large zinc mines shutting down, which should drive up prices. Can you expand on that scenario?
JG: The big zinc ore bodies are near an end and there is no replacement on the horizon for two reasons: 1) There are no more big ore bodies available. 2) There is no serious exploration for zinc. The copper business faces the same dynamic of gradual diminishment of raw material. Interestingly, as Brunswick and Century and Skorpion shut down their zinc operations, the sector has been freed up to bring on smaller-capacity mines, which helps the supply situation. And there is undeveloped supply capacity in China. But none of these potential developments can replace the magnitude of what we are losing by way of the big ore bodies going extinct.
TMR: Does the downward trend in terms of supply mean that the zinc market is not cyclical?
JG: All commodity markets have long-term cycles. But right now we are dealing with a special zone of the long-term zinc cycle as the big ore bodies close one after the other and are not replaced. This is a first for the zinc market, even though it was not unforeseen.
TMR: So what features can make the changing zinc market attractive to investors?
JG: Zinc equities are leveraged to the commodity, and there are not many equities left to buy on the TSX. But it is important to look at the zinc cost curve, which is very flat compared to the copper cost curve. As the zinc mine shutdowns cause supply limitations, and warehouse inventories start to peter out, market prices will have to rise. And due to the cost curve, even a small increase in the price of zinc will generate a big increase in revenue for producers.
TMR: Which zinc mining firms do you view as the most promising?
"The stock price of zinc companies that are already in production, such as Trevali, will increase the fastest, but the others should quickly follow suit."
JG: My favorite is Trevali Mining Corp. (TV:TSX; TREVF:OTCQX; TV:BVL) (TOP PICK, BUY rated at Dundee). It is in production and it has access to a great partner in Glencore International Plc (GLEN:LSE) (not covered at Dundee). It is quite rare for a junior mining firm to have a strategic partnership with such a giant as Glencore. And because up to 40% of zinc production comes from the juniors, Glencore is interested in obtaining the zinc feed even though it does not have the time to directly manage small operations. In the Trevali-Glencore symbiosis, Trevali mines the ore and sells the zinc concentrate to Glencore at market terms. Trevali is well positioned on the Toronto Stock Exchange (TSX) to benefit from increases in zinc prices, or even by stability in the price.
TMR: Where are the Trevali mines located?
JG: Trevali has a zinc mine in Peru called Santander, which is operating at capacity of 2,000 tons per day (2 Ktpd). Its New Brunswick complex is composed of one mill and two mines, which are scheduled to go on-line by the end of 2014 at about 3 Ktpd. Trevali can rely on Glencore's expertise to get these mines and mills into production. And the New Brunswick jurisdiction is very safe.
TMR: Trevali's stock is down from last year. Why?
JG: Trevali was six months late in delivering on its Peruvian operation and the stock went into the penalty box. To secure financing for the New Brunswick operation, the firm announced a potential $60M debt facility arrangement with RMB Resources, but the deal did not close. Since then, Trevali has raised equity ~$45M at $0.83/share, and its stock has gone up. With the equity deal complete and the debt facility potentially resized to $35M, the financing overhang is gone. It is a good buy now that it has one asset in operation and the other asset is financed and can be put into production by the end of next year.
TMR: Will we see higher zinc prices in the near term?
JG: The price of zinc should respond positively as more shutdowns are announced. The fundamentals are clearly in place for both the zinc price and the equity prices that are leveraged to zinc to increase. The stock price of companies that are already in production, such as Trevali, will increase the fastest, but the others should quickly follow suit.
TMR: Is there some kind of technology that can replace the industrial use of zinc?
JG: Not unless you figure out a way to eliminate rust! Galvanizing is always going to be needed, and there is no cost-effective replacement for it as far as I know. If cars and buildings were suddenly made out of plastic, the need for zinc would fall. But short of total plastification, zinc is here to stay.
Source: Ino.com

Brent Oil at US$ 108 on caution over Lybia exports and problems at North Sea Oil Field

Oil held near $108 a barrel on Thursday on caution over resolving Libya's oil export deadlock and on production problems at a North Sea oil field.

Brent crude oil was also lifted after traders discovered that output at Britain's Buzzard oilfield in the North Sea had been disrupted the previous day.

Nexen, the field's operator, said that it was in the process of restarting the field.

Buzzard is the largest of the fields that contribute to the Forties crude blend, the most important of the North Sea crudes underpinning the Brent benchmark. 
Brent crude for February delivery was 61 cents higher at $107.76 per barrel at 1433 GMT, after reaching a high of $108.20.

Brent fell as much as $6 per barrel last week, after Libya said it would restart its El Sharara oil field.

It is now producing around 650,000 barrels per day (bpd) of oil, of which 510,000 bpd is being exported, Oil Minister Abdelbari Arusi told Reuters on Wednesday.

This is up from below 100,000 barrels per day late last year but still around half of exports before protests paralysed Libya's output.

Analysts said expectations that exports would quickly rise back towards the 1.4 million barrels per day seen before strikes at oilfields began last July had evaporated due to escalating tensions between the Tripoli government and an armed group controlling three eastern oil ports.

"The market was too optimistic about developments in Libya and it's clear that the conflict is far from resolved and it's not going in the right direction," said Bjarne Schieldrop, chief commodity analyst at SEB in Oslo.

Libya said on Wednesday it would stop doing business with, and take to court, any foreign firms trying to buy oil from eastern ports seized by armed protesters.

The statement came after tension built this week with rebels inviting foreign firms to buy crude from them and the Libyan navy firing warning shots near a tanker it said was trying to load oil illegally.

U.S. oil was up 34 cents at $92.33. The contract shed $1.34 to a six-week low on Wednesday as a large build in crude stockpiles at the contract's delivery point in Cushing, Oklahoma, weighed on the market.

The worries about Libya and building U.S. stocks helped to push Brent to its highest premium to U.S. crude since early December, above $15 per barrel .

While the Cushing stocks rose, total U.S. crude stocks fell by 2.7 million barrels in the week to Jan. 3, data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) showed.

Overall U.S. crude inventories fell for the sixth straight week, totalling 33.5 million barrels for the period, the largest six-week drop since October 1990.

Still, commercial stocks remain near historical highs due to growing U.S. oil output.

Stronger-than-expected euro zone economic morale data, which reached its highest in 29 months, also helped to support demand sensitive assets like oil. 


Source: Reuters

London Metal Exchange Data

London Metal Exchange
Aluminium Alloy Cash Official Confirmed $/m tonneThu 13:301784.00
-23.00
-1.3
Aluminium Alloy 3mo Official Confirmed $/m tonneThu 13:301815.00
-20.00
-1.1
Primary Aluminium Cash Official Confirmed $/m tonneThu 13:301712.75
-23.50
-1.4
Primary Aluminium 3mo Official Confirmed $/m tonneThu 13:301757.25
-25.25
-1.4
Copper Cash Official Confirmed $/m tonneThu 13:307263.25
-92.75
-1.3
Copper 3mo Official Confirmed $/m tonneWed 13:307226.75
0.00
0.0
Lead Cash Official Confirmed $/m tonneThu 13:302118.50
-37.25
-1.7
Lead 3mo Official Confirmed $/m tonneWed 20:352139.00
0.00
0.0
N. American Special Alum Alloy Cash Official Confmd $/m tonneThu 13:301761.00
-9.50
-0.5
N. American Special Alum Alloy 3mo Official Confmd $/m tonneThu 13:301785.00
-12.50
-0.7
Nickel Cash Official Confirmed $/m tonneThu 13:3013422.50
-80.00
-0.6
Nickel 3mo Official Confirmed $/m tonneWed 13:3014102.50
0.00
0.0
Tin Cash Official Confirmed $/m tonneThu 13:3021812.50
-250.00
-1.1
Tin 3mo Official Confirmed $/m tonneThu 13:3021797.50
-247.50
-1.1
Zinc Cash Official Confirmed $/m tonneThu 13:302017.75
-30.75
-1.5
Zinc 3mo Official Confirmed $/m tonneWed 20:352029.00
0.00
0.0

Source: BBC

Reuters: European Stock market Indices


Thomson Reuters Europe (ex UK & Ire)1:37pm GMT171.74+0.74+0.43%
.TRXFLDEEPUThomson Reuters Em Mkt Europe1:37pm GMT333.88-3.19-0.95%
.TRXFLDGBPThomson Reuters Equity UK Index1:37pm GMT129.83+0.18+0.14%
.TRXFLDDEPThomson Reuters Equity Germany Index1:37pm GMT159.42+0.35+0.22%
.TRXFLDFRPThomson Reuters Equity France Index1:37pm GMT135.02-0.08-0.06%
.FTSEFTSE 100 Index
1:53pm GMT6,728.26+6.48+0.10%
.GDAXIDAX Index
1:53pm GMT9,511.23+13.39+0.14%
.FCHICAC 40 Index
1:53pm GMT4,256.82-4.14-0.10%
.SSMISMI Index
1:53pm GMT8,340.59-12.23-0.15%
.SMSIMadrid General Index1:35pm GMT1,056.71+9.56+0.91%
.OMXSPIOMX Stockholm All Share Index1:52pm GMT425.83+2.14+0.51%
.OMXHPIOMX Helsinki All Share Index1:53pm GMT7,392.45+53.96+0.74%
.OMXC20OMX Copenhagen 20 Index1:53pm GMT642.58+3.47+0.54%
.OSEAXOslo Exchange All-share Index1:53pm GMT605.47+1.09+0.18%
.ISEQISEQ Overall Index1:53pm GMT4,769.90+67.33+1.43%
.AEXAEX Amsterdam Index
1:51pm GMT404.05+0.19+0.05%
.BFXBell 20 Index
1:53pm GMT2,937.37+4.64+0.16%

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