LME forced to halt nickel trading, cancel deals, after prices top $100,000

Discussion in 'Commodity Futures' started by kmiklas, Mar 9, 2022.

  1. kmiklas

    kmiklas

    https://www.reuters.com/business/lm...g-day-after-prices-see-record-run-2022-03-08/

    LONDON, March 8 (Reuters) - The London Metal Exchange (LME) was forced to halt nickel trading and cancel trades after prices doubled on Tuesday to more than $100,000 per tonne in a surge sources blamed on short covering by one of the world's top producers.

    The LME's shock move came as Western sanctions threatened supply from major producer Russia and marked the biggest crisis to hit the 145-year-old exchange in decades.

    In the 1990s a rogue Sumitomo trader tried to corner the copper market and tin trading was stopped for five years in the 1980s.
     
  2. maxinger

    maxinger

    LME Nickel trading to stop trading for a few days?
    China's Tsingshan Holding Group which held short position must have a deep pocket.


    Anyway, Moscow Stock Exchange is still closed.
    will it also close for 5 years?
     
  3. noddyboy

    noddyboy


    So what happens to open positions? Must traders maintain the margins and never see the light of day of profits or losses?
     
  4. They're long physical, probably close to net hedged. Issue is paying the margin calls.

    GAT
     
    kmiklas likes this.
  5. JamesJ

    JamesJ

    Reminds me of the negative oil stuff 2 years ago...
    Shows how fragile those commodity future markets are, where a seemingly delta neutral position (eg. long physical short future) can bankrupt you due to erratic market behaviour.
     
    Gambit likes this.
  6. wpfund

    wpfund

    Yep! Caveat emptor!! These are the risks involved in trading these markets. Though rarely actualized one has to be prepared
     
    Gambit likes this.
  7. zdreg

    zdreg

    https://www.jstor.org/stable/2202064