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Teck Resources Ord Shs Class A T.TECK.A

Alternate Symbol(s):  TECK | TCKRF | T.TECK.B

Teck Resources Limited is a Canada-based mining company that operates in copper, zinc, steelmaking coal and energy segment. The Company’s operations and projects include Antamina, Cardinal River, Carmen de Andacollo, Elkview, Fording River, Fording River Extension, Fort Hills, Galore Creek Project, Greenhills, Highland Valley Copper, HVC 2040, Line Creek, NewRange Copper Nickel, NuevaUnion, Quebrada Blanca, Quebrada Blanca Phase II, Quintette Project, Red Dog, Sullivan Mine and Trail Operations. The Antamina mine is a large copper and zinc mine, located in the Andes Mountain range of Peru. Its Carmen de Andacollo is located in the Coquimbo Region of central Chile. The Fording River Extension Project is located adjacent and to the south of Teck’s existing Fording River Operations. Its Galore Creek is located within the territory of the Tahltan in northwestern British Columbia, approximately 150 kilometers northwest of Stewart.


TSX:TECK.A - Post by User

Post by goldishon Apr 07, 2009 9:59am
288 Views
Post# 15901652

metals look strong

metals look strong

Copper at 5-month high in London on demand optimism
Bloomberg / Bloomberg April 7, 2009, 0:30 IST

Copper and zinc rose to the highest in five months as industrial metals rallied on speculation that demand will rebound and as equities recovered worldwide. Copper gained for a fifth day, the longest run since February 2008, as governments’ efforts to revive growth pushed the MSCI World Index of global equities to its highest in almost two months

Copper for three-month delivery on the London Metal Exchange climbed as much as 3.7 per cent to $4,459 a tonne, the highest since October 30. It traded at $4,380.

“On the charts the metals look strong,” William Adams, an analyst at Basemetals.com, wrote in a note. “Joining the breakouts in copper and zinc, aluminum has cleared $1,475, while lead, nickel and tin are running up to tackle resistance.”

Three-month zinc rose as much as 2.2 per cent to $1,400 a tonne, the highest since October 15, before trading at $1,390. Nickel jumped $120, or 1.1 per cent, to $11,020 a ton.

Industrial metals’ gain was gold’s loss. The precious metal in London dropped to its lowest in more than two months to $874.08 an ounce as investors’ risk appetite increased.

“The weakness in gold suggests investors are taking profits and are lightening up on safe-haven investm-ents,” Adams said. “And with equities pushing higher, it does all suggest confidence is on the rise.”

Copper inventories tallied by the LME rose 0.5 per cent to 504,825 tonnes today, with metal earmarked for delivery almost doubling to 50,525 tonnes or 10 per cent of total stockpiles. Stockpiles monitored by the Shanghai Futures Exchange dropped for a fourth week to 22,908 tonnes last week, the lowest since January 22, according to exchange data.

The rally in copper prices, up 42 per cent since the beginning of the year, was “premature,” Eugen Weinberg, an analyst at Commerzbank AG in Frankfurt, said in a report.

Hedge-fund managers and other large speculators increased their net-short position, betting on falling prices, in New York copper futures in the week ended March 31, according to US Commodity Futures Trading Commission data.

Diego Hernandez, president of BHP Billiton Ltd.’s base- metals division, said April 2 that tight scrap supplies, feeding about 40 per cent of the total raw materials to the world’s copper smelters, would keep copper prices at $1.60 a pound ($3,527 a tonne).

Aluminum for three-month delivery rose 1.8 per cent to $1,507. Lead gained 1 per cent to $1,338 a tonne. Tin fell 1.4 per cent to $10,925 a tonne.

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