Latest News

Profit-taking has led to the fall of copper and other base metals

The copper price fell on Friday due to a stronger dollar, and investors locking in profits after the previous session’s record high.

Benchmark three-month Copper on the London Metal Exchange fell?3.3%?to $13,161 per metric ton at 1706 GMT, but held above its moving average of 21 days which provides support for $13,011.

The copper price is up by 6% in this month. It has reached a new record high of $14,527.50 as speculators continued their buying spree on Thursday. This drove the LME index of six base-metals contracts to a new'record high.

In a recent note, Stonex analyst Natalie Scott Gray said that the market fundamentals cannot justify copper's record-breaking year-to-date start. She said that copper prices above $13,000 per ton are unsustainable until 2026.

The fall in copper prices has lifted the Yangshan premium in China, a major metals consumer. The price of copper has dropped by?17%, to $27 per ton. This is still a historically low level for a measure that shows the Chinese appetite for imported metals. This week, the premium was at its lowest level since mid-2024.

A stronger dollar prior to the?U.S. Kevin Warsh, a former Federal Reserve governor, was chosen by President Donald Trump to lead the U.S. Central Bank when Jerome Powell's term expires in May. Dollar-priced materials become more expensive to buyers of other currencies due to a stronger U.S. dollar.

Technical problems caused a delay of one hour in the opening of the LME's electronic trading platform.

Silver and platinum, which are precious metals, registered double-digit percentage drops.

Other LME metals saw aluminium fall 2.3% to $3.146 per ton, while zinc fell 0.1% to $4,405.50; lead dropped 0.3% to $2,000.00 and tin fell 7.2% to $51,150, while nickel declined 3.2% to $17.770. (Reporting and editing by David Goodman and Elaine Hardcastle.)

(source: Reuters)