hab mal ne kleine kanne kaffee aufgesetzt,die großen kannen hab ich mal auf halde gelegt,brauchen wir wohl erstmal nicht ;-)
@bull....wenn ich nicht ruhig bin,wer dann ;-)
@kleber....wissen ist macht,nichts wissen macht auch nichts ;-)
aber spaß beiseite,auch ich denkle das die cash situation seitens TCM bestens ist,wir werden mal abwarten was die jahreszahlen so sagen.da TCM zurzeit ca. +- null molly abbaut (vlt. mit kleinen gewinn) und mit über 100 mio.CAN$ in `09 gestartet ist,denke ich das TCM die krise aussitzen kann ;-)
@blacky...recht hast`e ;-)
und da ich immo wieder nen bissel zeit hab,werde ich hier mal wieder nen bissel spam aktion betreiben ;-)
china auf einkaufstour *gg*
China buys overseas copper for reserves
By Eadie Chen and Alfred Cang
Reuters
Wednesday, February 4, 2009
BEIJING/SHANGHAI - China has started buying copper from domestic bonded warehouses and overseas markets as a move to gradually triple its state reserves to about 1 million tonnes, trade sources familiar with the situation said on Wednesday.
The country's State Reserves Bureau (SRB) holds about 300,000 tonnes in copper stockpiles, the sources said. It has taken advantage of the slump in commodity prices to add to reserves of resources such as crops, metals and oil, but had not been seen in the copper market during the recent downturn.
One of the sources said the SRB could target 1 million tonnes in total, reinforcing remarks by a copper smelter source who told Reuters in December that the SRB could buy at least 700,000 tonnes of the metal, more than two months' of China's output.
"The buying is being done very quietly and not in one big go. It is from multi-channel suppliers such as domestic bonded warehouses and imports," the source, who asked not to be identified due to the sensitive topic, told Reuters. "They are doing it drop by drop to avoid sharp price fluctuations," the source said.
The sources did not provide a timeframe on the copper reserve plan. Details of China's commodities reserve stockpiles are confidential.
International copper prices jumped 1 percent to $3,384 a tonne following the Reuters news, having gained 10 percent so far this year after more than halving in 2008.
Copper inventories in a major SRB warehouse in Shanghai increased by about 10,000 tonnes last week, when the whole country was celebrating the Lunar New Year and financial markets were closed, two sources said.
The move was partly due to limited inventories available from Chinese domestic copper smelters, the sources said, in line with a comment by an executive at the country's top smelter in January.
China's imports of refined copper could return to record levels in January after hitting an all-time monthly high in December, seen as a result of possible buying by the state reserve body and higher Chinese prices, analysts said.
"The market talk is that we will see relatively large import figures for January copper imports as there is a possibility that the government was planning to purchase and will do so soon," said analyst Li Xun at Dalu Futures in Shanghai.