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Shanghai copper reaches near five-month high on China stimulus hope

Shanghai copper rose to its highest level in almost five months on Friday, buoyed as expected by the expectation of additional stimulus from China's top consumer to spur economic growth.

By 0158 GMT the most active copper contract at the Shanghai Futures Exchange had risen 1% to $10,875.71 a ton, its highest level since October 2024.

Chinese officials said on Thursday that they would ease monetary policy "at the appropriate time", and could take additional stimulus measures if economic growth falters.

Market participants expect China's National People's Congress (NPC) to announce additional stimulus measures as the trade war between China and the United States escalates.

Meanwhile, U.S. President Donald Trump has suspended the 25% tariffs that he imposed on most goods coming from Canada and Mexico this week.

The exemptions expire on 2 April, when Trump threatens to impose a worldwide regime of reciprocal duties on all U.S. Trading Partners.

Trump announced that 25% of aluminium and steel imported from March 12 will be subject to tariffs. He also ordered an investigation into the possibility of new tariffs for copper.

Citi stated in a report that they expect the price of ex-U.S. Copper to drop to $8,500 a ton during the second quarter this year due to investors' copper positions unwinding on tariff headwinds.

SHFE aluminium climbed 0.5% to 20920 yuan per ton. Zinc gained 0.8% to 24080 yuan. Nickel jumped 1.4% to 129700 yuan. Lead advanced by 0.6% to 17490 yuan. Tin firmed up 2.1% to 262,850.

The price of three-month copper at the London Metal Exchange was $9,668.5 per metric ton. This is a 0.7% decline.

LME aluminium rose 0.1%, to $2700 per ton. Zinc fell 0.5%, to $2914, Nickel eased by 0.2%, to $16,260. Lead dropped 0.5%, to $2037. Tin lost 0.1%, to $32,550. ($1 = 7.2501 yuan) (Reporting by Anushree Mukherjee in Bengaluru; Editing by Subhranshu Sahu)

(source: Reuters)