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CommodityWireMetal Prices: China is centre of gravity for metal price volatility, says ING Economics
Metal Prices

China is centre of gravity for metal price volatility, says ING Economics

This story was originally published at 12:49 IST on 9 February 2026
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Informist, Monday, Feb. 9, 2026

 

MUMBAI – The recent rapid rise in metal prices has raised curiosity about the trading pattern, as well as the role that fundamentals play compared to role of positioning in the market. A recent study by ING Economics has argued that the centre of gravity of short-term price rise lies in China, where one can see rising turnover and open interest on its derivatives exchange. This trend has more or less continued despite tightening regulatory measures.

 

"Recent trading patterns suggest a clear shift in where and how metals prices are being set. While markets remain global, the sequencing of moves increasingly points to China as the centre of gravity for short term price formation. Fundamentals still matter but this shift means that positioning and momentum play a bigger role, leading to more volatility," it said.

 

An examination of data on trading on the Shanghai Futures Exchange showed that activity on the exchange has surged during the latest rallies across base and precious metals. Rising turnover and open interest signal a greater role for speculative positioning in driving momentum. More interestingly, key price breaks in gold and silver have increasingly occurred during Asian hours, with Europe and the US following rather than leading, the global think tank said in a release last week.

 

China has long dominated through physical demand, but its role in price formation is evolving. "Domestic investors are using commodities futures more actively to express macro views and manage risk, especially at a time when property markets are weak, equities are uneven, and capital outflows face constraints. Metals – both base and precious – have become a more prominent alternative investment amid heightened economic and geopolitical uncertainty."

 

The study found it difficult to justify some recent gains on fundamentals alone. While fundamentals differ by metal, physical tightness has not kept pace with the scale of recent price gains, underscoring the influence of positioning, leverage and momentum in short term moves, it argued.

 

The rise in SHFE activity is broad based, across base and precious metals, which points to a general increase in speculative participation rather than metal specific shocks. "SHFE-driven price signals are increasingly setting the tone for global markets through positioning rather than physical arbitrage. When SHFE trades at a premium, it can curb exports and encourage domestic stockpiling, tightening perceived availability abroad and amplifying moves on the LME," the release said.

 

Regulators have recently responded to high volatility in metal prices by raising margin requirements and tightening trading conditions in selected contracts. While these measures have at times moderated trading activity, they have not fundamentally altered the broader pattern of increased speculative participation across SHFE metals contracts.

 

"Metals markets are undergoing a structural shift – Chinese speculative flows are becoming a defining force in short term price discovery. While longer term fundamentals still anchor prices, the growing influence of positioning means sharper moves, higher volatility and a greater risk of abrupt corrections as sentiment or policy shifts," it said.  End

 

Reported by Abhijit Doshi

Edited by Avishek Dutta

 

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