Nickel Holds YTD Gain
2026-02-26 18:13
By
Andre Joaquim
1 min. read
Nickel futures were at $17,800 per tonne in late February, not far from their highest in one month and holding the metal's rally that broke through in December last year amid risks of tighter supply.
The Indonesian government announced that the quotas fore nickel ore production would be cut by more than 100 million tonnes from the previous year to a cap of 270 million in 2026.
This followed statements from major miners in the Weda Bay area that production will see aggressive pullbacks, consolidating Jakarta's move and erasing chances that mining giants would still negotiate higher quotas due to the historical ambiguity on caps to wet tons.
Previously, Indonesian authorities had also signaled they would crack down on illegal mining activities, magnifying the impact of lower supply.
Elsewhere, prices continued to be supported by commodity funds as nickel's utility in datacenters and electrification technologies made it a proxy to bets on AI that have gained speculative ground.