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Copper trapped between weak Chinese data and hopes for stimulus

Copper trapped between weak Chinese data and hopes for stimulus

On Monday, copper prices remained above $10,000 per metric ton as the market weighed downbeat metals consumption data from China against hopes of stimulus measures and interest rate reductions in the United States.

The benchmark three-month copper price on the London Metal Exchange rose 0.1% by 1000 GMT to $10,073 per ton, after reaching an intraday high of $10,000, which was close to a five-month high reached on Friday of $101,126.

The data showed that China's factory production and retail sales fell to their lowest levels since last year in August, putting pressure on Beijing to provide more stimulus.

"This week, the theme will be stimulus. Not only in China, after that data dump which was not exactly pretty, but in the U.S., with a rate reduction expected later this week," Ole Hansen said, head of commodity strategies at Saxo Bank, in Copenhagen.

It is expected that the U.S. Federal Reserve will cut rates by 25 basis points at its meeting next week, following recent weak reports on the job market.

Investors also viewed the U.S. - China negotiations in Madrid. These focused on Bytedance's divestment of TikTok as part of broader discussions on tariffs and policy.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange's most traded copper contract closed the daytime trading 0.4% higher, at 81,000 Yuan ($11371.77) per tonne.

LME copper has gained 14% this year but is still struggling to break through the $10,000 psychological level.

Hansen stated that he is watching a double top technical formation on the LME copper market, based off of highs in March 2010 at $10,164.50 and in September 2011 at $10,158.

"That massive double-top is really holding the market back for now." He said that he thought we would need an economic stimulus to remove the cap in the near term.

LME aluminium rose 0.1%, to $2,691 per ton. Nickel increased 0.6%, to $15,480. Lead fell 0.6%, to $2005.50. Tin dropped 0.1%, to $34,935; and zinc was unchanged at $2,956.

Click here to see the top metals stories ($1 = 7.1229 Chinese Yuan) (Reporting and editing by Eric Onstad)

(source: Reuters)