Dow Jones Newswires' Andrea Hotter takes a look at the last bastion of open outcry trading in Europe and one of the few remaining in the world, the London Metal Exchange. Tracing its history from ...
LONDON: Copper prices slipped on Thursday after touching a five-month peak as worries about global growth overshadowed the ...
Anxiety about imminent levies on copper has triggered a spike in New York-traded prices, causing traders to scramble to ship ...
LONDON (Reuters) -Sigma Broking, one of eight members of the London Metal Exchange allowed to trade on the open-outcry floor, is in talks to sell its business three years after joining the LME ...
LONDON: Financial services firm Clear Street is looking to join the London Metal Exchange’s (LME) open-outcry trading floor, in a move that would bolster the prospects of the iconic “Ring ...
The open outcry pit at the London Metal Exchange Ltd. in London. (Bloomberg) -- Almost every day for the past 144 years, traders engaged in shouting matches at the London Metal Exchange to set the ...
Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange (LME) was down 0.3% at $9,469 a metric ton in official open-outcry trading. When asked on Monday whether Canada and Mexico had done enough to avoid ...
Traders react on the trading floor of the open outcry pit at the London Metal Exchange Ltd. (LME) in London, U.K. on Wednesday, Sept. 25, 2019. The LME doubled the length of its closing open ...
one of eight members of the London Metal Exchange allowed to trade on the open-outcry floor, is in talks to sell its business three years after joining the LME, three sources with knowledge of the ...
Three-month aluminium on the London Metal Exchange surged to a record of $3,580 a tonne before paring gains to trade at $3,568 in official open-outcry trading, up 2.6%. By Eric Onstad LONDON ...
one of eight members of the London Metal Exchange allowed to trade on the open-outcry floor, is in talks to sell its business three years after joining the LME, three sources with knowledge of the ...
Anxiety about imminent levies on copper has triggered a spike in New York-traded prices, causing traders to scramble to ship the metal to the US.