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Shanghai copper prices rise as US trade restrictions against China are considered

Shanghai copper prices rise as US trade restrictions against China are considered

Shanghai copper rose on Thursday, thanks to bullish expectations about China's five-year plan. This was despite renewed tensions between China and the United States, where the White House is considering limiting software exports.

As of 0330 GMT, the most active copper contract traded on the Shanghai Futures Exchange rose 0.73%, trading at $86,610.81 per metric tonne.

The benchmark three-month price of copper rose 0.26%, trading at $10,691 Yuan per ton.

The focus of the market is on the Fourth Plenum of the ruling Communist Party, which will close on Thursday. This meeting is to finalize a draft proposal for the 15th five-year plan outlining the goals and objectives of economic and social growth.

Analysts and observers expect that these goals will focus on consumption as well as technological advancements and industrial upgrades. According to National Bureau of Statistics data released on Wednesday, China's output of copper in September fell 2.7% from month-to-month despite an increase of 10% year-over-year.

The decline month-on-month was in line the market expectations. Traders expect further decline in October.

The country's Mines Minister said that Angola will begin producing its first major copper mine soon, which is owned by China's Shining Star Lcarus.

Copper's gains shrugged off renewed trade tensions following reports that Washington could bar exports to China for items made using U.S.-developed software as a response to China’s new rare earth restrictions.

Sources say that the details are unclear and that it is possible that this plan will not go ahead.

When asked by reporters about proposed software limitations, U.S. Treasury secretary Scott Bessent said on Wednesday that he was "open to everything".

Aluminium was also up 0.59% among SHFE's base metals. This followed a move on the LME where the 3-month aluminium hit $2,822 per ton. It is the highest price since June 2022.

Century Aluminum announced on Tuesday that its Iceland smelter was forced to reduce production by two-thirds due to a failure of electrical equipment.

Zinc rose 1.27%. Lead soared 3.12%. Tin fell 0.15%. Nickel was little altered.

Other LME metals saw a slight decline in zinc, a gain of 0.58% for lead, and little change for nickel or tin. ($1 = 7.1230 Chinese yuan renminbi)

Thursday, October 23, DATA/EVENTS 0500 Japan Chain Stores Sales YY Sep 645 France Business Conditions Mfg, Overall Oct 1400 UK CBI Business Confidence Q4 Flash Oct 1400 Existing Home Sales in the US Sep (Reporting and Editing by Janane Vekatraman; Lewis Jackson, Dylan Duan)

(source: Reuters)