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Shanghai copper prices fall due to weaker Chinese demand and profit-booking

Shanghai copper prices fall due to weaker Chinese demand and profit-booking
Shanghai copper prices fall due to weaker Chinese demand and profit-booking

Shanghai copper fell on Tuesday as profit-taking, a weaker Chinese economy and a general risk-off trend weighed on the markets.

As of?0330 GMT the most traded contract on the Shanghai Futures Exchange fell 1.96% to $14,064.78, per metric ton. It briefly touched 96,010, its lowest level since December 25.

Losses in the first minutes of trading have narrowed, after gains in the benchmark 3-month copper at the London Metal Exchange which rose 2.19% to $12,489.50 per ton.

Traders said that lower copper prices encouraged dip-buying and helped reduce losses.

Shanghai copper prices fell as profit-taking and a weaker Chinese demand due to high prices led to the decline.

Yangshan Copper Premium A measure of Chinese appetite for imported copper fell to $53 per ton on Sunday, down from $55 the previous day, but still an improvement over below $40 since mid October.

Copper was also impacted by the broader move to a risk off stance among investors. Gold and silver both saw a decline from Monday's record highs.

Investors continue to watch the U.S. Federal Reserve, after President Donald Trump threatened to sue Fed chair Jerome Powell on Monday. They are also waiting for the minutes of the December meeting of the central banks to be published on Tuesday.

Tin was the most affected among other SHFE metals. The Shanghai contract fell 4.84%, to 325 780?yuan per ton.

Stock levels continue to increase, despite the high tin price.

Tin stocks that are available for delivery According to Friday's SHFE weekly stock report, the number of sheds in SHFE rose to 8,477 tonnes last week.

The benchmark three-month?tin rose, however, by 1.59%, to $41,390 per ton.

Nickel surged. The Shanghai contract for the most active nickel rose 3.71%, to 132200 yuan per ton after reaching a nine-month high.

The benchmark nickel for three months also rose, rising 4.15% and reaching $16,470 per ton. After breaching the $16,500 mark to hit a high of $16,540 in nine months.

The reported plan by the Indonesian government of reducing nickel production in 2026 is what has caused the recent strength of nickel.

Other SHFE metals include zinc, which gained 0.56% and lead, which added 0.40%.

($1 = 7.0026 Chinese yuan renminbi) (Reporting by China C&E Team; Editing by Rashmi Aich) ($1 = 7.0026 Chinese Yuan Renminbi)

(source: Reuters)