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Citi raises its outlook, causing copper to reach a record-high and head for a weekly increase

The price of copper reached a new record on Friday, after Citi raised its outlook for the metal. A weaker dollar provided additional support in anticipation of a rate cut expected by the U.S. next week.

At 1025 GMT, the benchmark three-month price of copper at the London Metal Exchange had risen 1.4% to $11,609.50 per ton. The metal, which is widely used in construction, manufacturing and power generation, rose earlier by as much as 2.2%, reaching a peak of $11,705.

LME copper has gained over 30% since 2025 and is expected to finish the week with a gain of 3.8%.

"I believe copper will slowly rise in price. "The funds are now backing it because they see shortages developing," SP Angel analyst John Meyer said, referring a series supply constraints at major mines.

Citi expects that copper prices will continue to rise into the early part of next year, and reach an average of $13,000 in second quarter, up $12,000 from its October outlook. Its bull case has also increased to $15,000, from $14,000.

Bank of America says that macro-funds will continue to support prices as investors prepare for a soft U.S. economy landing and a growing supply shortage.

Meyer stated that such forecasts "help encourage some of the larger funds to invest in copper." It's been gaining momentum for a while now.

Citi stated that additional tightness was expected due to U.S. stocks linked to COMEX-LME arbitration. The premium for the LME cash copper contract is still high. Over the next three months, prices have dropped to $35 per ton from $88 on Tuesday, indicating a less urgent need for metal.

In China, copper inventories On the Shanghai Futures Exchange, the number of tons traded fell by 9.2% compared to last week.

Aluminium fell 0.1%, to $2,902 per ton. Tin dropped 0.8%, to $40,000 Nickel grew 0.2%, while zinc climbed 0.7%, reaching $3,112, after hitting its highest level in nearly a year. Reporting by Tom Daly. Dylan Duan, Lewis Jackson and Dylan Duan contributed to the reporting. Rashmia Aich, Mark Potter and Mark Potter edited the article.

(source: Reuters)