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Copper falls on stronger dollar and weak China data

Copper falls on stronger dollar and weak China data
Copper falls on stronger dollar and weak China data

The copper prices were under pressure Thursday due to a stronger dollar, and poor data from China's top metals consumer. They had hit their highest level in nearly a month the previous session.

The benchmark three-month copper price on the London Metal Exchange fell 0.7% to $10,893.50 per metric tonne by 1121 GMT.

On Wednesday, the metal reached $11,025 - its highest level since October 30 - on expectations that the U.S. Federal Reserve would cut interest rates by December. The metal reached a record-high of $11,200 due to disruptions in mine supply on October 29.

The metals market focused on the data that showed China's industrial profit contracted in October, as well as the debt woes of developer Vanke.

The 21-day moving Average at $10,811 is a technical support for copper.

An LME executive stated that the premium of 2% to 3% between the Comex and LME copper contracts, which continues to attract the metal into U.S. stocks, will likely persist for the next 18-months. This is due in part to the uncertainty surrounding copper tariffs within the U.S.

Comex copper stocks Stocks in the LME-registered warehouses, which reached a record last week at 378.900 metric tonnes, have continued to rise this week. Stocks at the LME registered warehouses The total number of tons is down by 42% to 157,175 this year.

The inventory situation outside the U.S. is expected to remain tight. The premium of the LME Cash Copper Contract over the 3-month forward On Monday, the price of a ton reached its highest level since mid-October at $25 and it was last seen at $20 on Friday.

Other LME metals saw aluminium fall 0.9%, to $2,836.50 per ton. Zinc fell 1.1%, to $3,023.50. Lead and nickel remained steady, at $1,979 each and $14,815.

On persistent concerns about supply disruptions, tin rose by 0.1% to reach $37,970, after reaching $38,650. This was the highest price since May 2022. (Reporting and editing by Eileen Soreng; Additional reporting by Dylan Duan)

(source: Reuters)