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Shanghai copper rates little changed amid US rate cuts uncertainties

Shanghai copper rates little changed amid US rate cuts uncertainties

The copper price was little changed on Tuesday as traders were cautious about when the U.S. would cut rates again, and doubts persisted about whether China will provide more stimulus in order to boost its economic growth.

As of 0800 GMT, the most traded copper contract on Shanghai Futures Exchange was 0.04% higher, closing daytime trading at 79.970 yuan (11,233.32 dollars) per metric tonne.

London Metal Exchange's benchmark copper for three months fell by 0.1%, to $9.965 per ton at 0804 GMT.

Jerome Powell, the chair of the U.S. Federal Reserve, said that on Tuesday it was important for central banks to balance competing risks such as high inflation and an eroding job market.

The Fed's policy divisions are evident in the arguments of other officials, which has led to uncertainty about future rate cuts.

The U.S. Dollar strengthened, which weighed on the market. The dollar is stronger, making commodities that are traded in the greenback costlier for investors who use other currencies.

China's key lending rate remained unchanged on Monday for the fourth consecutive month, following a U.S. interest rate cut. This left investors wondering if Beijing would implement more stimulus measures, and kept sentiments cautious.

Galaxy Futures analysts said that the wet material incident at Freeport’s Grasberg mine operations remained unresolved and was affecting supply of raw copper concentrate.

Aluminium rose by 0.1% among other SHFE base-metals, while zinc fell by 0.46%. Nickel increased 0.2%. Lead declined 0.32%. Tin rose 0.52%.

$1 = 7.1190 Chinese yuan renminbi $1 = 7.1190 Chinese Yuan Renminbi (Reporting and editing by Dylan Duan, Lewis Jackson and Janane Vekatraman).

(source: Reuters)