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Copper hits most affordable in more than 5 weeks on firm dollar

The majority of nonferrous metals rates fell on Monday, with London copper striking its most affordable in more than five weeks, amid a firm dollar and constraints in physical need.

Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange fell 0.2% to $9,747 per metric ton by 0417 GMT, aluminium shed 1% to $2,552.50, zinc dropped 0.9% to $2,741 and lead reduced 0.4% to $2,190.50.

LME tin edged down 0.1% at $31,410 a heap, and nickel was nearly the same at $18,035.

The dollar index rose on Monday, making greenback-priced metals more pricey to holders of other currencies, after U.S. data revealed the world's largest economy created a lot more jobs than anticipated in May.

The jobs information led traders to as soon as again move their expectations of when the Fed will cut rates and by just how much.

Earlier in the session copper prices fell 0.2% to $9,741 a. load, their most affordable since May 2. The LME three-month contract has. lost about 12% since it struck a record high of $11,104.50 on May. 20 as speculative investors examined copper's red hot rally.

Speculative net positioning on COMEX copper declined to its. lowest since April 16 on Tuesday, the latest exchange data. showed.

Meanwhile, the usual premium to import copper into China. remained at a discount rate, reflecting weak demand from the world's. greatest copper customer amidst high and volatile costs. << SMM-CUYP-CN >

Copper inventories in storage facilities tracked by the Shanghai. Futures Exchange << CU-STX-SGH > continued to climb up and were at. 336,964 tons on Friday, the highest given that March 2020.

Trading volume was thin due to a public vacation in China. The SHFE is closed on Monday.

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DATA/EVENTS (GMT)

0830 EU Sentix Index June

(source: Reuters)