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China promises fiscal boost as copper reaches record high

China promises fiscal boost as copper reaches record high
China promises fiscal boost as copper reaches record high

The copper price reached a new record on Friday, and was on track for a third weekly gain. This was boosted by the promise of a fiscal boost from top consumer China next year. The Federal Reserve's lower interest rates and expansion of the balance sheet.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange's most traded copper contract closed the daytime trading session higher by 1.95%, at 94.080 yuan per metric tonne ($13,335.03). The contract reached a new record of 94,570 Yuan, exceeding the previous one set on Monday.

Benchmark three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange rose 0.13% to $11,887 per ton as of 0726 GMT after reaching a record high of $11,952 during afternoon trading.

The SHFE?and LME Benchmarks have gained 1,4% and 1,9% respectively this week.

The Xinhua report on the annual Central Economic Work Conference, held December 10-11, showed a?plea from Chinese leaders to maintain a 'proactive' fiscal policy by 2026.

The market sentiment was also boosted after the Fed cut rates by 25 basis point on Wednesday, and announced that it would start buying short-dated Government bonds on Friday. The Fed's balance will be expanded once more by the restart of buying bonds.

Copper is in short supply due to mine supply disruptions, and the massive flow of copper from the United States.

ANZ Research predicts that copper prices will remain?above 11,000 per ton by 2026. Prices could reach $12,000 before the end of the year due to supply constraints and accelerating growth in demand.

SHFE tin gained more than 5%, reaching a 44-month record at?338,800 per ton. This was largely due to fears of disruptions in supply.

SHFE aluminium grew by 0.8%. Zinc climbed 2.45%. Nickel dipped by 0.15%. Lead fell 0.67%.

Other LME metals saw a slight decline in aluminium, while nickel and lead were little changed. Zinc lost 0.2%, and tin rose 1.67%. $1 = 7.0551 Chinese Yuan (Reporting and editing by Amy Lv, Lewis Jackson and Mrigank Dahniwala).

(source: Reuters)