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Copper prices drop ahead of expiry date; US-Russian talks are in focus

Copper prices drop ahead of expiry date; US-Russian talks are in focus

The copper price fell on Tuesday, as traders moved forward positions in anticipation of expiry. Meanwhile, attention was focused on the U.S. effort to end Moscow's almost three-year conflict with Ukraine.

The London Metal Exchange's (LME) CMCU3 three-month copper contract eased by 0.1% at $9,382 per metric ton as of 0140 GMT. On Friday, the contract reached its highest level in three months at $9.684.50.

A trader stated that "if the discussions between the U.S.A. and Russia progress favorably, there will be an increase in the likelihood of lifting of the ban on metals from Russia, which would lead to an influx Russian metals onto the western market."

Russia is one of the world's largest producers of nickel, copper and aluminium. Last year, the LME prohibited supplies of Russian metals produced after April 2024 into its system.

Later in the day, senior U.S. officials and Russian officials are expected to meet in Saudi Arabia for the first time in many years. This is ahead of the meeting between U.S. president Donald Trump and Russian president Vladimir Putin.

The spread between cash LME copper and benchmark 3-month futures For the first time since 19 months, prices spiked on Friday to $249 per ton.

Investors and traders completed rolling forward positions in anticipation of the contract expiration this week.

Three sources said on Saturday that the U.S. had proposed to take ownership of 50% Ukraine's essential minerals.

Aluminium on the LME dropped 0.2% to $2.639.5 per ton. Zinc fell 0.5% to 2.857.2, tin rose 0.1% to 32,705, and lead shed 0.4% at $1,983.5. Nickel also lost 0.4%, to $15,435.

The price of aluminium in the SHFE fell 0.4%, to 20,635 Chinese yuan ($2,837.44). Nickel was unchanged at 123.980 yuan. Zinc gained 0.2%, to 23,860 Yuan. Lead was stable at 17,140 Yuan. Tin dropped 0.2%, to 262,840 Yuan. $1 = 7.2724 Chinese Yuan Renminbi (Reporting and editing by Sumana Niandy).

(source: Reuters)