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Copper prices rise as US-China tensions ease

Prices of copper rose on Monday, as optimism about easing tensions in trade between the United States of America and China, and increased Chinese imports of this industrial metal lifted sentiment.

The benchmark copper price on the London Metal Exchange rose 1% to $10,613 per metric tonne at 0935 GMT. It had dropped more than 3% Friday after President Donald Trump

Threatened sharply

Tariffs on Chinese imports are higher.

Copper shortages are expected to occur in the future

Supply disruptions

In Indonesia, Chile, and the Democratic Republic of Congo last week, the prospect of U.S. rate cuts, coupled with a weaker currency, helped push prices to a 16-month high of $11,000 per ton.

Copper prices rose due to traders' optimism that Trump will scale back his rhetoric as he did before and better prospects for China, the top consumer.

China's

Copper imports are on the rise

Exports grew by 14.1% to 485,000 tonnes in September, compared with the previous month.

Diversifying export

This year, markets will be away from the United States.

The focus elsewhere is on the zinc stocks registered in LME warehouses, which are at 37,475 tonnes, down 70% from mid-July and at their lowest level since March 2023. .

The premium on the cash contract for the three-month ahead was pushed higher by concerns about zinc supply on the LME. The price of zinc per ton has reached a three-year high. Zinc for three months rose 0.1% to $3.006.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange monitors warehouses and has found that stocks are increasing. This is a factor that undermines the notion of tight supply. . Since the middle of July, they have increased by more than twice that amount.

Aluminium traders reported that two companies, 0#LMEWHL>, holding large amounts warrants (title documents conferring ownership) are behind the cash contracts for the three-month ahead contract. The premium has flipped from a lower price earlier in the month. .

Aluminium for three months rose by 0.3%, to $2.756, while lead fell 0.7%, to $2.006, and tin slid 1.4%, to $35,645 per ton, while nickel sank 0.4%, to $15,200 per ton.

(source: Reuters)