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Copper prices fall as a firmer dollar and large inventories weigh

Copper prices fell on Thursday as the firmer dollar, rising inventories and lower demand due to the Lunar New Year holiday, in China, which is the world's largest metals consumer, all weighed on the price.

As of 1700 GMT, the benchmark three-month copper price on London Metal Exchange had fallen 0.9% to $12,789 per metric ton. The price of copper fell by as much as 1.9% in the morning session, following a 2.3% increase on Wednesday.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange, which will reopen on February 24, is currently closed.

Ole Hansen is the head of commodity strategy for Saxo Bank. "We must get China back to see what will happen, both on a speculative level and also in terms of physical demand."

DOLLAR PRICED METALS GET MORE EXPENSIVE After minutes from the U.S. Federal Reserve, which suggested that policymakers weren't in a hurry to reduce interest rates and were willing to raise them if inflation remained high, the dollar index rose. Dollar-priced metals become more expensive to holders of other currencies when the dollar strengthens.

Copper stocks at LME-approved warehouses The total tonnage of 225,575 tonnes, the highest since March 2025, has increased by 925 tons.

Hansen stated that technicals were able to offset the negative impact of the high stock and the 'firmer dollar. Copper was also'supported by technicals.

He said that "since last August, the 50-day moving averge has been giving us support every time we've come down."

He said that the minimum support level was $12,670 and the maximum psychological resistance is $13,000.

Other metals saw a 0.5% drop in zinc to $3335 per ton, and aluminium fell by 0.9% to $ 3,062.50 after breaking Wednesday's four-day loss streak. Lead fell 0.4% to $1.955; nickel dropped 0.2% to $17240, and tin declined 0.6% to $45,425. (Reporting and editing by Alexandra Hudson; Additional reporting by Ishaan arora in Bengaluru, Swati verma and Barbara Lewis; Shrey Biswas and Barbara Lewis)

(source: Reuters)