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Copper rises in Middle East truce

Copper rises in Middle East truce

The copper price rose on Wednesday, supported by the tentative ceasefire agreement between Iran and Israel that improved market sentiment and the stronger yuan in China, a major metals consumer.

The price of three-month copper at the London Metal Exchange rose 0.3% to $9,696.50 per metric tonne by 1034 GMT.

On Wednesday, the ceasefire brokered on behalf of U.S. president Donald Trump seemed to hold. This was a day after each country had signaled that their air conflict had ended.

The yuan of China has been steadily rising against the dollar. It is now nearing its highest level in over a month. The stronger yuan will make dollar-priced materials more appealing to Chinese buyers.

The International Copper Study Group's (ICSG) data also shows that the global refined market had a 50,000 ton deficit in April compared to a surplus of 12,000 metric tonnes in March.

The market had a surplus of 233,000 tons in the first four month period, which was essentially unchanged from the previous year.

Lead prices on the LME rose by 1.4%, to $2,047.50 per ton, after reaching a record high of $2 049. Lead smelters in China have increased their offers for used electric bikes batteries in anticipation of a better demand for lead in the summer months. This also helps primary lead prices, according to a Shanghai-based analyst.

LME aluminium dropped 0.5% to 2,566.50 after the ceasefire between Israel and Iran removed the immediate threat for Middle East producers to use the Strait of Hormuz as a shipping route.

Zinc increased by 0.8% to $2703, while tin rose 0.6% to $32,420, and nickel gained 0.6% at $15,005. (Reporting and additional reporting by Hongmei Li, Editing Shailesh Kumar Editing)

(source: Reuters)