Latest News

The dollar is under pressure as copper prices rise due to supply problems

The copper price rose on Tuesday due to concerns about supply from the top producers Chile and Indonesia. However, a stronger U.S. Dollar kept gains in check.

The London Metal Exchange reported that the price of three-month copper rose by 0.3%, to $10.679.50 per ton at 0717 GMT. The metal reached its highest level since May 2024 on Monday before easing.

Freeport Miner said that five workers who had been missing following a mudflow disaster at the Grasberg Copper and Gold Mine in Indonesia, last month, have now been found dead.

Fawad Rasaqzada is a market analyst for City Index and FOREX.com. He said that the tragic incident, coupled with tightness in other major copper producing sites, had pushed prices down.

The traders are confident that the near-term supply constraint could offset this.

Grasberg, the second largest copper mine in the world, accounts for 3% global concentrate production.

Supply concerns will likely persist in this year, given the operational suspensions at Grasberg and disruptions at Kamoa Kakula mine in the Democratic Republic of Congo, as well as El Teniente in Chile.

Analysts have estimated that disruptions in the copper industry could lead to a loss of 591,00 tons of output between September 2025 through 2026. This has led Goldman Sachs Citi and Bank of America, among others, to increase their price predictions.

Indonesia's Mining Ministry issued a new regulation on Tuesday that reduces the validity period of mining production quotas from three to one year. The move is intended to give the government greater control over the output levels, and to support commodity prices.

After an accident on July 31, the copper production in Chile fell by 9.9% compared to last year.

The dollar index continued to gain against its competitors, despite the gains being capped. A stronger dollar makes greenback-denominated assets more expensive for holders of other currencies.

Other London metals include aluminium, which fell by 0.4% to $2.714 per ton. Nickel was down 0.2% at $15,450. Lead remained flat at $2.004.5. Tin lost 0.3%, to $36,615. Zinc dropped 0.2%, to $3,001.50.

Golden Week, which runs from 1-8 October, is a time when Chinese markets will be closed.

Click here to see the latest news in metals, and other topics. (Reporting and editing by Sumana Naandy and Subhranshu Shu in Bengaluru).

(source: Reuters)