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Copper strikes two-week low as market awaits clarity on smelter cuts

Copper rates pulled away to a twoweek low on Wednesday as financiers awaited further information on strategies by Chinese smelters to cut production.

Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange ( LME) was down 0.1% at $8,853.5 a metric ton since 1705 GMT. It dipped to $8,776 earlier in the session for its most affordable since March 13.

LME copper skyrocketed to an 11-month high of $9,164.50 on March 18 after top Chinese smelters announced plans for joint production cuts but did not supply information of the extent or timing of any suspensions.

The copper rally after Chinese smelters' plans to cut was slightly overbought, stated Dan Smith, head of research study at Amalgamated Metal Trading.

The smelters will have another conference on Thursday March 28 on strategies to advance upkeeps and minimize loss-making capability in the face of a scarcity of copper concentrates, industry sources stated.

Adding to the uncertainty about smelter cuts, a state-backed research study house stated copper output from China was expected to grow by 3% this year.

Also dampening interest among speculators was a strong seasonal build-up of copper stock in China.

The discount on the LME cash copper contract against the three-month agreement stayed close to a record high, signalling expectations of rising supply. << MCU0-3 >

Copper was not far from its fair worth, still supported by strong long-lasting principles, raising the prospect of additional upside this year, Smith added, citing information revealing greater Chinese industrial earnings.

Funds are coming back to commodities as a basic concept, which always type of helps. Rates and volumes of gold and bitcoin nearing record highs are general indications of more money around looking for chances, he added.

Among other metals, three-month zinc hit its least expensive cost in almost four weeks as weak steel need weighed on the market.

Zinc, primarily used for galvanising steel, was down 1% at $ 2,440 a heap after touching $2,409 for its weakest considering that March 1.

Aluminium decreased 0.2% to $2,298 a lot, nickel edged down 0.1% to $16,620, lead lost 0.7% to $2,006 and tin was up 0.3% at $27,535.

(source: Reuters)