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Shanghai copper increases on weaker dollar and improving Chinese economy

Shanghai copper increases on weaker dollar and improving Chinese economy

Shanghai copper rose on Thursday as a weaker dollar and improved economic data from China, the world's largest metal consumer, boosted market sentiment.

As of 0315 GMT, the most traded copper contract on Shanghai Futures Exchange (SHFE), rose 0.7%, to 76.090 yuan per ton ($10,413.02).

Dollar index is near the three-year-low hit last week. This makes greenback-priced goods cheaper for buyers who use other currencies.

Data released on Wednesday showed that China's economy grew by 5.4% on an annual basis in the first three months of this year, exceeding estimates. This was due to solid industrial output and consumption.

Daniel Hynes is a senior commodity analyst at ANZ Bank. He said that "copper led the base-metals higher after better than expected economic data in China boosted confidence."

Beijing has ordered airlines not to accept any more Boeing aircraft deliveries, and the U.S. government has limited the export of Nvidia H20 artificial-intelligence chip to China.

ANZ stated in a report that if global GDP growth drops below 3% we may see a 5-10% reduction in the demand for copper.

The data released by the Peruvian energy and mines minister on Wednesday showed that the copper output was almost flat in February compared to the same month last year.

The benchmark copper price for the three-month period on the London Metal Exchange remained unchanged at $9,199 per metric ton.

LME aluminium rose by 0.4% to a ton of $2,391.5, while lead increased 0.6% to $1,919; nickel remained at $15,690 per ton; zinc increased 1.2% to $2,612 and tin rose 1% to $31,095.

SHFE aluminium rose 0.7% to 19,700 Chinese yuan per ton. Zinc fell 0.1% to 22125 yuan. Lead increased 0.2% at 16,785 yuan. Tin climbed 0.2% to 258,250 Yuan. Nickel gained 0.9% at 125,860 Yuan. ($1 = 7.3072 Chinese Yuan) (Reporting and editing by Rashmi aich in Bengaluru)

(source: Reuters)