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Shanghai tin reaches near six-month peak on Indonesian supply concerns

Shanghai tin reached a six-month high Tuesday as supply concerns grew following reports about a crackdown against illegal mining in Indonesia, a key producer.

The Indonesian president Prabowo Subito ordered the closing of 1,000 illegal tin mining operations on the island Sumatra where tin-mined goods were being smuggled on small boats and ferryboats, according to state media Antara.

Antara quoted Prabowo as saying that 80% of the tin produced in the main producing region of Bangkia Belitung, off the east shore of Sumatra, was being smuggled abroad.

Fears of a lower supply in the second largest tin-producing country in the world fueled the rises in soldering metal.

As of 0313 GMT, the most active tin contract at Shanghai Futures Exchange rose 1.15% to 275,250 Yuan ($38.630.49) a metric ton. The tin price has fallen 0.16% in the first month.

It reached 283,000 yuan per ton earlier in the day. This was the highest level since April 3.

The benchmark three-month tin at the London Metal Exchange is down 1.58% to $34,930 per ton. This was lower than the $35,100 it reached on Monday, its highest level since April 4.

The London contract is expected to finish the month at a lower level by 0.25%.

Copper was the highest-rising metal among the SHFE base materials, rising 1.29%, to 83240 yuan per ton. It is expected to finish the month at a 5.1% rise.

Metal prices were supported by the disruptions in supply at Freeports Grasberg's cooper mine in Indonesia and China's plans to stabilize growth in the nonferrous industry.

Zinc rose 0.58%. Lead was down 0.44%. Aluminium grew by 0.12%. Nickel fell 0.15%.

Copper, among other LME metals fell by 0.32%. Aluminium was down 0.5%. Zinc dropped 0.61%. Nickel declined 0.8%. Lead also fell 0.2%. $1 = 7.1252 Chinese Yuan (Reporting and editing by Subhranshu Sahu; Lewis Jackson, Dylan Duan).

(source: Reuters)