Latest News

Trading slows before the China holiday as inventories increase

Copper prices dropped on Tuesday as a result of rising inventories, muted trading and the Lunar New Year holiday in China (the world's largest metal consumer) that begins this weekend.

The benchmark?three-month?copper price on the London Metal Exchange fell 0.6% to $13,088.50 per metric tonne at 1704 GMT.

Chinese brokerage GF Futures stated in a report that the demand has cooled since downstream Chinese buyers have completed their pre-holiday restocking.

Morgan Stanley analysts wrote in a report that China's apparent fourth-quarter?copper demand fell 12.3% on an annual basis, but the full-year 2025 metal demand is up 4%.

Due to the Lunar New Year, which begins on February 15, there will be very little data about recent consumption available until March.

Copper stocks at LME registered warehouses Daily LME data revealed that 189,100 tonnes of coal were in the market, their highest level since May. 4,800 tons had been delivered to warehouses in Taiwan, and the U.S.

Shanghai Futures Exchange monitors inventories in warehouses At the end of last week, Comex copper stocks rose to 248,911 tonnes, their highest level since March. Daily?inflows continue at 535,430 tonnes, a new record.

The Chinese yuan surpassed 6.91 to the dollar for the first since May 2023, which provided some support for copper. The stronger yuan is making dollar-priced materials?more appealing to Chinese buyers.

The 21-day moving?average at $13,062 is a technical support for copper.

Other LME metals include aluminium, which fell by?0.9%, to $3.098 per ton. Zinc rose 0.5%, to $3.393, while lead increased 0.3%, to $1.974. Tin added 0.4%, to $49.025, and nickel gained 0.9%, to $17.500. (Reporting and editing by Harikrishnan Nair, Anil D'Silva and Harikrishnan Nair; Additional reporting by Lewis Jackson and Dylan Duan)

(source: Reuters)