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Copper prices steady as concerns over Chinese demand weigh

Metal traders reported that copper prices were stable on Monday, as a weaker dollar and slowing manufacturing in China's top consumer weighed on sentiment. Meanwhile, mounting supply concerns helped to support the price.

By 1127 GMT, the benchmark copper price on London Metal Exchange had not changed much. It was $10,880 per metric ton. Last week, fears about shortages drove it to an all-time high of $11,200. The traders said the easing of trade tensions between China and the United States was a positive. A private sector survey conducted after Trump threatened to impose tariffs of 100% on Chinese products showed that China's factory activities in October expanded at slower pace due to the tariff anxiety.

The Yangshan copper premium is a sign of weak purchasing The gauge is a measure of China's appetite to import copper. The premium is now $36 per ton, down from $58 at the end of September and $100 last May.

Shanghai Futures Exchange monitors copper stocks in warehouses The increase of 45% to 116 140 tons since late August suggests that China has surpluses. Since Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell stated last week that the lack of data from the federal government could prevent central banks from cutting interest rates this year, the dollar has firmed up. The dollar has firmed up since Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said last week that a lack of federal government data could prevent the central bank from making another interest rate cut this year.

Goldman Sachs analysts do not expect the fundamental tightening expected by the markets to emerge in the next six-month period, despite the disruptions.

They said that "even accounting for a significant decline in global refined product, we maintain our view that the copper market will be in small surplus by 2026. This is consistent with our forecast of $10,500/t in 2026."

Other metals saw a 1% increase in aluminium to $2.912 per ton. Zinc gained 0.9% at $3.084, while lead rose by 0.5% to $2.026. Tin increased 0.2% to $35,175 while nickel fell 0.2% to $15,205.

(source: Reuters)