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Copper drops over 2% and heads for the worst month since November

The copper price fell by over 2% Wednesday and is heading for its worst month since November, due to weak data coming from China's top metals consumer as well as lingering uncertainty in trade.

London Metal Exchange benchmark copper fell 2.2% at 1045 GMT to $9,231 per metric ton, its lowest price since April 17. Prices dropped 5% in April.

Comex copper contracts fell 4.3% to $4.63 a lb, the lowest since April 17.

The data released on Wednesday shows that China's manufacturing activity declined at its fastest rate in 16 months, in April. This is a call for more stimulus.

John Meyer, analyst at SP Angel, said that macroeconomic uncertainties are currently holding back copper.

While Trump's tariffs could create a mini recession in the West we believe that new stimuli in China and Asia will continue keep manufacturers moving and drive growth.

The lack of progress made in the de-escalation of the U.S./China trade dispute has weighed on financial markets.

China denies any ongoing discussions, despite claims by U.S. officials. U.S. Treasury secretary Scott Bessent stated on Tuesday that it would become apparent to Beijing over time that the Chinese tariffs were not sustainable.

The data due on Wednesday will likely show that the U.S. economic growth slowed or even contracted during the first quarter.

Dollar-priced materials are now more expensive for those who use other currencies.

Another huge drop was in inventories due to the copper price floor. In warehouses monitored the Shanghai Futures Exchange, which fell 23.5% last Friday, to 89.307 tons. This is their lowest level since January 17. The price of the commodity fell 32 %.last week.

Copper imports to the U.S. have been diverted due to tariff threats against U.S. imports and tight scrap supply.

Meyer said that the shortage of scrap in China was a major problem. A huge copper concentrate deficit caused Chinese smelters reduce their capacity.

Aluminium dropped 1%, to $2.442 per ton. Zinc fell 0.5%, to $2.635.5. Lead fell 0.7%, to $1.963.5. Tin rose 0.4%, to $32,015; and nickel increased 0.3%, to $15,595. All metals are headed towards monthly declines. (Reporting and editing by Sahal Muhammad in Bengaluru, Ashitha Shivaprasad from Bengaluru)

(source: Reuters)