Latest News

Market awaits Fed clarification as copper prices rise due to supply concerns

The price of copper rose on Tuesday as traders took into account supply developments, record U.S. stocks and the uncertainty surrounding the Federal Reserve’s interest rate decision for December.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange's most traded copper contract closed the daytime trading session up 0.65% to 86,600 Yuan ($12206.29) per ton.

As of 0754 GMT, the benchmark three-month copper price on London Metal Exchange had increased by 0.71% to $10,850 per tonne.

Freeport Indonesia announced on Monday that it had reduced its production plans for 2026 at its flagship Grasberg Mine to 478,000 tonnes of copper cathode, from the 700,000 tons previously expected. This was in response to a deadly mudflow in September, which killed seven people.

UBS raised its copper price forecast for next year on Friday, citing tighter supply due to mine disruptions including the Grasberg closure, as well as strong long-term demands.

Comex stocks of copper have surpassed 400,000 short tonnes for the first. Profitable arbitrage continues to draw metal into the United States.

Stockpiling by traders ahead of possible U.S. Tariffs in 2026 is a major reason why inventories are far higher than LME or Shanghai levels.

Market caution dominated the overall trading, as traders awaited more clarity about a rate cut from the Fed in December.

Analysts at Sucden Financial said that with few macro-cues in a U.S. data schedule and little direction coming from fundamentals there was "little incentive" for prices to move decisively outside of their current ranges.

Aluminium, nickel, tin, and zinc were all up, but lead was down.

The LME also saw a rise in zinc, which rose by 0.58%. Lead and tin, however, were not much changed. $1 = 7.0947 Chinese Yuan Renminbi (Reporting and editing by Rashmi Dhaniwala and Mrigank Aich)

(source: Reuters)