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On May 21st, during the Q1 2026 earnings call, NIO founder, chairman, and CEO William Li stated that the rising prices of raw materials this year, particularly chips and memory, have put significant pressure on the entire industry. NIO faces an average cost pressure of over 10,000 yuan per vehicle. NIO will maintain price stability and uphold the overall competitiveness of its products and services. It will not prioritize volume as its primary business strategy, but will maintain reasonable growth in sales volume.According to Hong Kong Stock Exchange documents, Liuliumei Co., Ltd. has submitted a listing application to the Hong Kong Stock Exchange.On May 21, the China-France Working Group on Climate and Environmental Challenges held its first meeting in Beijing, China, on May 20, 2026. The meeting was jointly led by the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the French Ministry of European Affairs and Foreign Ministry, with participation from eight relevant Chinese ministries. The French Ministry of Ecological Transition, Biodiversity and International Negotiations on Climate and Nature participated as the French co-lead unit of the working group. The working group serves as a new and important dialogue platform between China and France in the field of climate and environment. The two sides exchanged in-depth views on key issues in the climate and environment field, including global climate governance, the 31st Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and the Second Global Inventory, climate mitigation and energy transition, climate adaptation, biodiversity, land degradation and forests, pollution, water and oceans, territorial spatial planning and ecological protection and restoration, and climate, biodiversity, and environmental finance.U.S. EIA natural gas inventories for the week ending May 15 were 101 billion cubic feet, compared to an expected 96 billion cubic feet and a previous reading of 85 billion cubic feet.Mexican President Simbaum: I will meet with Homeland Security Minister Mourin in Mexico today.

Copper Beats Gold This Week With Fears of A Rate Rise

Haiden Holmes

Feb 17, 2023 11:44

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Gold prices declined on Friday as stronger-than-expected U.S. inflation statistics and hawkish statements from Federal Reserve officials stoked fears of more interest rate rises, while copper prices outpaced commodity markets this week due to confidence towards China.


The U.S. producer price index inflation increased more than anticipated in January, according to statistics released on Thursday. This follows a report on the consumer price index that indicated inflation in the world's largest economy remained sticky.


James Bullard, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, stated that the central bank might resume raising interest rates at a more rapid pace and raised the possibility of a 50 basis point increase in March.


Meanwhile, Loretta Mester, president of the Cleveland Fed, stated that interest rates would likely rise over 5% as the Fed fights inflation, and that the central bank should have increased rates by more than 25 basis points at its February meeting.


The dollar and Treasury rates soared in response to their remarks, as investors flocked to the greenback in anticipation of higher and safer returns. This caused a substantial outflow from gold markets.


Spot gold decreased 0.2% to $1,833.67 per ounce, whilst gold futures declined 0.5% to $1,843.75 per ounce. Prices of the yellow metal were projected to fall between 1% to 1.7% this week, marking the third consecutive week of declines.


The likelihood of rising U.S. interest rates is unfavorable for non-yielding assets such as gold, as it increases their opportunity cost. Increasing interest rates also cause investors to select the dollar as a safe-haven asset due to its higher yields.


Other precious metals declined on Friday. Platinum prices dropped 0.6% to $920.30 per ounce, a three-month low, while silver futures sank 1.2% to $21.448 per ounce, a two-and-a-half month low.


Copper prices declined on Friday but were expected to end the week in the black due to optimism on China and probable supply disruptions.


Copper futures slipped 0.2% to $4.1137 a pound and were expected to rise 2.4% this week, their highest weekly performance since the beginning of January.


Copper was also poised to end a streak of three consecutive weekly losses as China, the world's top copper importer, signaled further stimulus measures to bolster economic development. Earlier this year, China loosened the majority of anti-COVID policies, which bolstered hopes for the nation's economic recovery.


A deteriorating conflict between the government of Panama and international copper miners threatens to halt the country's copper exports, so limiting supply and driving up prices.