Chichot historii
/ 83.5.216.* / 2009-04-03 14:27
UK analysts CRU, sponsors of the CESCO Week Conference,
threw down the bear gauntlet at the very start.
CRU forecasts global copper demand will fall by 13.5 percent
this year.
In a bi-polar world China is expected to register what by
its recent standards will be anaemic growth of just 1.1 percent,
while demand in the rest of the world is forecast to slump by an
unprecedented 19 percent this year.
CRU's conclusion is that prices will fall to $2,200 per
tonne in the months ahead once China has "filled up." For CRU's
full analysis of the copper market, please click on the
following link:
UK analysts CRU, sponsors of the CESCO Week Conference,
threw down the bear gauntlet at the very start.
CRU forecasts global copper demand will fall by 13.5 percent
this year.
In a bi-polar world China is expected to register what by
its recent standards will be anaemic growth of just 1.1 percent,
while demand in the rest of the world is forecast to slump by an
unprecedented 19 percent this year.
CRU's conclusion is that prices will fall to $2,200 per
tonne in the months ahead once China has "filled up." For CRU's
full analysis of the copper market, please click on the
following link:
UK analysts CRU, sponsors of the CESCO Week Conference,
threw down the bear gauntlet at the very start.
CRU forecasts global copper demand will fall by 13.5 percent
this year.
In a bi-polar world China is expected to register what by
its recent standards will be anaemic growth of just 1.1 percent,
while demand in the rest of the world is forecast to slump by an
unprecedented 19 percent this year.
CRU's conclusion is that prices will fall to $2,200 per
tonne in the months ahead once China has "filled up."