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After a rally to $11,000/t, copper prices fall on the back of profit-taking

The copper price fell on Friday, as investors took profits after the metal had rallied to its highs in 16 months the previous session. This was due to concerns over tight supply.

In official open-outcry trade, the price of three-month copper at the London Metal Exchange fell by 0.9% to $10.765 per metric ton. On Thursday, it reached $11,000 and moved closer to the all-time high of $11,104.50 in May 2024.

After Freeport declared force majore at its Grasberg mine, in Indonesia, at the end September, investors have piled into copper. Data released on Thursday showed that the copper production of Chile's Codelco fell 25% in August following a deadly mine collapse.

Discounts on the LME Cash Price to the 3-month Copper Contract The price of a ton dropped to $26 from $57 one month earlier.

Copper, which is used in construction and power, has been unable to rally due to a lackluster demand.

David Wilson, BNP Paribas' analyst, said that demand for industrial metals is generally not very good. To have a bull cycle that lasts, industrial commodities need to be characterized by a strong demand story.

Copper inventories in China's top metals consumer, China, have risen 15% since late September. The Yangshan premium on copper has also increased. The price of copper, which reflects the demand for imports, remained at $49.50 per ton. This is its lowest level since August 19.

In official activity, lead was down 0.8% at $2,013 per ton, disregarding the LME data that showed 118,000 tonnes of the metal marked as ready for delivery from LME-registered storage facilities, which brought the cancelled stock to 70%. <0#MPBSTX-LOC>

LME aluminium dropped 0.4% at $2,786.5. Zinc rose 0.4% at $3,022.5. Nickel was down by 0.9% to $15,350. Tin fell 1.4% to 36,550. (Reporting and editing by Kirsten Doovan, Vijay Kishore, and Polina Devitt)

(source: Reuters)