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Rising LME stocks, mixed China data keep copper steady

Rising LME stocks, mixed China data keep copper steady

The copper price was little changed Tuesday, as the mixed data from China's top metals consumer balanced out the pressure of rising inventories in warehouses that are approved by London Metal Exchange.

On the LME, the price of copper benchmark fell by 0.1% at 0945 GMT to $9.613 per metric ton. Technically, the contract is sandwiched in between its 50-day average and its 100-day average at $9,659 a metric ton and $9,567 a metric ton, respectively.

Copper used in construction and power is down by 2.6% in July. Exports to the United States have become less attractive after Washington announced last week that it would impose a tariff of 50% on copper imports from August 1.

Morgan Stanley wrote in a report that "LME copper prices should decline modestly, as the U.S. demand for 'extra front-loading' eases. This will allow inventories to replenish. However, downside seems limited."

The announcement from Washington left only three weeks before the deadline for tariffs, and the amount of metal that was marked as ready to be delivered out of the LME's warehouses dropped to just 11% of total stocks. The so-called cancelled stock is at its lowest level in five months, compared to 56,325 tonnes a month earlier.

Data from China revealed that its economy has slowed down less than expected, a sign of resilience against U.S. Tariffs. The June industrial production rose 6.8% on an annual basis, which was higher than expectations.

China has promised to abandon the rapid urbanization that once fueled its economy, and instead build cities with a sustainable, resilient, and liveable environment.

The dollar was hovering just below its three-week-high on Tuesday ahead of U.S. Inflation data, which could provide traders with a hint on the short-term outlook of interest rates.

LME aluminium increased 0.2% to 2,597 per ton. Zinc fell 1.0% to 2,702.50. Lead eased 0.5% at $1,992. Tin and nickel both dropped 0.4%, to $33,355 a ton and $14,995 a ton respectively. (Reporting and editing by Tomasz Janovowski; Polina Devitt)

(source: Reuters)