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Copper prices reach five-month high on hope for US rate cuts

Investors' expectations of U.S. rate cuts and concerns over possible shortages have fueled copper prices to their highest levels in five months.

The price of three-month copper at the London Metal Exchange rose 0.2% in open-outcry official trading to $10,068 a metric ton. This is its highest level since march 26.

The price of copper has increased by around 15% in the past year, but it has been unable to break through the $10,000 psychological barrier.

Base metals rallied along with other markets after U.S. jobless claims surged on Thursday, confirming the belief that Federal Reserve would cut interest rates.

"I thought the consensus was for a quarter point cut, but I now think that it could be more." "I think the market has been lifted by this, and the bullish mood helped copper," Robert Montefusco of broker Sucden Financial said.

CTAs bought dips below $10,000 and pushed it higher. The Chinese came in overnight and that got us started.

Commodity Trade Advisor investment funds (CTAs) are driven primarily by computer programs that use technical signals.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange's most-traded copper contract gained 1.22%, to 81.060 yuan (11,384.67) per ton.

Supply concerns also supported prices.

The massive Grasberg Copper Mine in Indonesia, one of the largest copper mines in the world, remained closed on Friday while the search for trapped workers continued.

In July, copper production in Peru, which is the third largest copper producer in the world, dropped 2% on an annual basis to 228,007 tons.

Nickel was the biggest gainer on LME. It climbed 1.3% to $15,340 per ton in official activity after a taskforce in Indonesia, the world's top nickel producer, seized large plots of land from miners as part of a crackdown against illegal exploitation.

Lead was up by 0.1% to $1,998 while tin increased 0.2% to $34,750.

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(source: Reuters)