The London Metal Exchange saw itself caught in a bind again after it halted nickel trading the same day it reopened the market for the resource today.
The exchange initially suspended the nickel market on March 8 after the price skyrocketed beyond US$100,000/tonne in just a few hours, after Chinese nickel producer Tsingshan Holdings Group covered its massive short position on the resource. It canceled US$3.9 billion worth of trades, plummeting the price back to US$50,000.
The firm also imposed a 5% price limit, up or down, to regulate the trading.
However, when the nickel market opened today, the price went below the limit at US$45,590. But due to systems error, LMEselect still “allowed a small number of trades to be executed below this lower daily price limit.” This prompted the exchange tp halt once again the nickel trade.
“The LME will continue to investigate the IT system error and will update the market in due course as to a future re-opening of the Nickel market on LMEselect,” the exchange’s statement read.
The news coincided with the announcement by China’s Shanghai Securities News that Tsingshan has reportedly reached an agreement with two companies to “swap its nickel products with a purer form” to close out its short position on the exchange.
I wonder where #nickel contracts will go to for pricing, prb have to consider if Shanghi or CME need to be incorporated. LME is forgetting that there is an actual phyiscal market that needs to continue to transact…can't keep closing.
— Anthony Milewski (@A_Milewski) March 16, 2022
The LME has been defeated. https://t.co/TNZm9shdDp
— Tony Greer (@TgMacro) March 16, 2022
TSINGSHAN INKS DEALS TO SWAP NICKEL PRODUCTS FOR LME DELIVERY – STATE MEDIA
— SmallCapSteve (@smallcapsteve) March 16, 2022
And there you have it folks. The LME, a Hong Kong-owned exchange, is letting their deeply underwater pig iron-nickel producer swap their counterfeit product with a real one. #nickel pic.twitter.com/10FAW4laVw
Information for this briefing was found via London Metal Exchange, Business Insider, Reuters, CNBC. The author has no securities or affiliations related to this organization. Not a recommendation to buy or sell. Always do additional research and consult a professional before purchasing a security. The author holds no licenses.