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Shanghai metals are rising after China pledges to boost industrial growth

Shanghai metals are rising after China pledges to boost industrial growth

After China's Industry Ministry last week promised to stabilize the machinery, automobiles and electrical equipment sector, the most traded metals contracts at the Shanghai Futures Exchange increased on Monday.

Tao Qing said that China would launch action plans to stabilize growth in these industries.

Tao said that the move was designed to "improve supply capacity for premium products" in order to prepare the industry to achieve an upgrade of quality and a reasonable growth, measured by quantity. It also promotes an "orderly withdrawal of outdated production capacities".

SHFE zinc was the biggest gainer, up 2.69% at 22,900 yuan a ton ($3,190.48), as of 0102 GMT. The contract had hit 22,915 Yuan earlier, its highest level since May 14.

SHFE Nickel rose by 1.25%, to 121.750 yuan. Aluminium gained 1.17%, to 20.745 yuan. Lead grew 1.04%, to 16.990 yuan. Copper climbed 0.87%, to 78.990 yuan. Tin advanced 0.56%, to 265,390.

Metals analysts at a Beijing futures company commented that "China's Industrial Ministry said was encouraging for metals generally." They added, "Industrials sectors are all relevant to metals."

The ministry stated that the plan would cover 10 industries in addition to downstream industries. These include steel, nonferrous materials, petrochemicals, and construction materials.

Metals have generally responded positively to news. Those with the most room for price increases will be stronger, said a Shanghai-based futures analyst.

After Friday's spike, LME metals fluctuated only slightly on Monday. Zinc rose 0.5% to $2.832.5 per tonne. It reached $2,837 earlier in the session. This was the highest level since April 1.

LME aluminium increased 0.15% to 2,633.5. Lead gained 0.13% at $33,490. Nickel added 0.11% at $15,235. While lead decreased 0.1% to $2,000 Copper was unchanged at $9,776.5, after reaching $9,777 last Friday, its highest level since July 8.

Click or to see the latest news in metals, and other topics. (Reporting by Hongmei Li. Editing by Sumana Niandy.

(source: Reuters)