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Copper prices fall as LME stocks reach an 11-month high

The price of copper fell on Tuesday due to a'stronger dollar' and a rise in inventories at London Metal Exchange-registered storage facilities, as well as low trading volumes because of the Chinese Lunar New Year holiday.

Benchmark three-month "copper" on the London Metal Exchange fell 1.8% to $12,619 per metric ton at 1702 GMT, after reaching its lowest level since February 6 (12,586).

Metal, which is used for power and construction, has fallen 13% since a record high was reached on January 29,?on the back of a wave speculative purchases, encouraged by expectations that demand would be strong.

The high prices have'muted the demand for metals in the top metals consumer China, and increased the stockpiling of 2025 in the United States.

Daily LME data revealed that copper inventories within the LME system had reached a 11-month-high of 221,625 tonnes after 9,975 tonnes were delivered to LME registered warehouses in South Korea, the U.S. and Taiwan.

Alastair Munro of Marex, a metals strategist, says that the next thing to watch is how China will react when it returns on February 24, and whether inventories begin to fall.

Discount on the LME Cash Copper Contract?to three-month contracts On Monday, the spread increased to $114 per ton, its highest level in over a year. This indicates ample supply nearby. This is a dramatic change from the $102 premium on January 20.

On Tuesday, the discount was $109.

Lead?lost 0.5%, to $1,947 per ton, after hitting a low of $1943.8 for two months. The LME stock jumped to 287.125?tons, the highest since June.?54.675 tonnes were delivered to Singapore warehouses.

Aluminum fell by 0.7% to $3.032, while zinc and nickel both declined 1.6%, to $16,830. Tin rose 0.3%, to $45,340. (Reporting from London by Polina Devtt; Additional reporting by Ishaan Aroo in Bengaluru, Editing by Diti Pjara).

(source: Reuters)