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LME copper reaches near 3-week highs on dollar dropback and China stimulus hopes

LME copper reaches near 3-week highs on dollar dropback and China stimulus hopes

London copper reached a near-three-week high Thursday, spurred on by a sharp drop in the U.S. Dollar and expectations for more stimulus coming from China's top consumer.

As of 0154 GMT on the London Metal Exchange, three-month copper rose by 0.4% to $9 624 per metric ton. This is its highest level since 14 February.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange's most active copper contract rose 1.7% to 78,430 Yuan ($10,834.67) per tonne, a two-week high.

Dollar index fell 1.5%, hovering near a 4-month low. This made commodities priced in greenbacks cheaper for buyers with other currencies.

As investors anticipated more headlines on stimulus amid concerns about a trade war, the Chinese National People's Congress entered its second day.

Base metals rose in Asian trade due to the prospect of more China stimulus measures. Premier Li Qiang said the goal of economic growth for 2025 is 'about five %',", according to Daniel Hynes.

The White House announced on Wednesday that President Donald Trump would exempt automakers for one month from the 25% tariffs he has imposed on Canada and Mexico, as long as they follow existing free-trade rules.

Trump's tariffs are straining relations with Canada and Mexico. Trump imposed a 10% additional duty on Chinese products, and Beijing responded by imposing its own tariffs.

The looming threat to import tariffs has pushed up the price of aluminium in the U.S. to record levels.

SHFE aluminium increased 1.6%, to 20,925 Yuan per ton. Zinc gained 1.6%, to 24,030 Yuan. Nickel gained 0.4%, to 128,680 Yuan. Lead rose 0.4%, to 17,390 Yan, and tin firmed up 0.6%, to 258,350 Yan.

LME aluminium rose 1.1% to $2688.5 per ton. Zinc climbed 0.8% to 2,900.5; lead remained at $2,033.5; nickel surged 0.6% to 16,000 and tin jumped 0.9% to $30,975. ($1 = 7.2388 Yuan) (Reporting and editing by Rashmi aich in Bengaluru)

(source: Reuters)