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Weaker dollar, Fed cut bets drive copper up

Weaker dollar, Fed cut bets drive copper up

The copper price rose on Wednesday, thanks to a weaker US dollar and expectations for further interest rate reductions in the U.S.

The price of three-month copper at the London Metal Exchange increased by 0.9%, to $10.673.50 per metric ton as of 0939 GMT.

Copper reached its highest level in 16 months of $11,000 Oct. 9 due to the increased investment into hard assets, and concerns about reduced mine supplies after disruptions occurred in Indonesia, Chile and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Analysts added unexpected production accidents to their estimates of the supply-demand balance for metals used in construction and power by 2025.

Amy Gower is a commodities strategist with Morgan Stanley.

In his speech on Tuesday, Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell opened the door to more rate cuts.

The prospect of lower interest rate increases the appeal of metals priced in dollars for buyers who use other currencies.

China, the world's largest metals consumer, was hoping for a fresh round of monetary stimulus after September data showed deflationary pressures continued, as both consumer and producer price fell amid a prolonged housing market slump and tensions with America.

The premium between the LME Cash Copper Contract and the Three-Month Contract continued to drop, reaching its lowest point at $37 per ton. On Monday, it widened up to $227 - its highest level since June - due to activity in the run up to Wednesday when holders of short positions will have to reduce or rollover contracts.

Zinc premium The price of a ton dropped to $75 from the previous day's $200. Gower stated that the LME contract is vulnerable to price volatility because zinc stocks are at their lowest levels since early 2023 in LME-registered storage warehouses.

LME aluminium increased 0.4% to $2.747.50 per ton. Zinc rose 0.2% to $2.946.50, lead climbed 0.6% to $1.994, tin shot up 0.9% to $35.465, while nickel increased 0.3% to $15.175. (Reporting and editing by Louise Heavens; Polina Devitt)

(source: Reuters)