This article is 9 years old. Images might not display.
However, small changes to inventories in some commodities suggest underlying demand was also better than expected, it said.
“This should be mildly supportive for commodity markets – particularly copper and oil,” it said.
“However, with an early Chinese New Year, we don’t expect the gains to be long-lasting.”
While coal imports picked up from November (+8.9% month-on-month), the seasonal impact remains weak, according to ANZ. Imports fell 35% y/y to 17.6 million tonnes.
“We suspect the weakness could be attributed to thermal coal, as a seasonal warm northern hemisphere winter has seen domestic production remain strong and demand weak,” ANZ said.
Imports of copper and crude oil rose strongly in December (26% and 9.3% y/y respectively). However, while iron ore imports also grew (+11% y/y), a build in port inventory suggests underlying demand remains weak.