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Many Shanghai base metals dip on China stimulus disappointment

A lot of base metals slipped in Shanghai on Monday as leading customer China's newest stimulus bundle fell short of financiers' expectations.

The most-traded December copper contract on the Shanghai Futures Exchange (SHFE) fell 0.8% to 76,650 yuan ($ 10,665.83) a ton, while the three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange (LME) inched up 0.4% to $9,478 per metric ton by 0530 GMT.

SHFE aluminium dropped 0.8% to 21,505 yuan a load, nickel declined 1.6% to 127,510 yuan, zinc lost 0.9% to 24,965 yuan, tin relieved 0.5% to 260,320 yuan, while lead inched up 0.2% to 16,920 yuan.

Copper rates may continue to stay soft at this juncture unless Chinese policy makers do more to improve the economy, stated Kelvin Wong, OANDA's senior market analyst for Asia Pacific.

China's top legal body approved a $1.4 trillion bundle on Friday to alleviate local government's surprise debt problems rather than directly injecting money into the world's. second-biggest economy, as some investors had hoped.

Information revealed that China's customer costs rose at the slowest. rate in 4 months in October, while manufacturer price deflation. deepened.

Financiers will be watching key China financial data today. to assess need, said Daniel Hynes, senior product strategist. at ANZ.

On the other hand, financiers are worried that Donald Trump's return. to the White Home would see an escalation in trade tensions. with China as the president-elect has threatened tariffs in. excess of 60% on all Chinese goods.

Trump's trade tariffs will absolutely be unfavorable for. copper. But like in 2016, if he plans to improve United States. facilities, it could increase copper demand, Wong stated.

Copper inventories in warehouses kept track of by the SHFE fell. 8.8% from Nov. 1, the exchange said on Friday, a sign of. enhancing demand.

LME aluminium increased 0.3% to $2,628.5 a lot, zinc. increased 0.6% to $2,996, lead added 0.2% to. $ 2,028.5, tin fell 0.5% to $31,485 and nickel. decreased 1.1% to $16,225.

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(source: Reuters)