Latest News

Copper prices fall from two-week highs as stocks rise and temper demand optimism

The price of copper fell on Thursday, after reaching a two-week high in the previous session. A stronger dollar and rising inventories dampened expectations about a recovery in demand from China, the top consumer of the metal in the world.

In official open outcry, the benchmark?three-month?copper price on the London Metal Exchange fell 0.3% to $13,286 a metric ton.

The metal had reached $13,350 during the previous session. This was the highest level since February 11. Shanghai Futures Exchange also saw a similar high overnight.

The Chinese have returned to the market since the first day of the Lunar New Year. According to SP Angel analyst John Meyer, the Chinese could be stockpiling copper for strategic purposes or following a new directive requiring the construction of data centres.

Beijing will host China's annual parliament gathering in early March. The event is expected to release a "five-year plan" for 2026-30.

The Yangshan premium The price of copper in China is now $50 per ton compared with $33 prior to the holiday.

The U.S. Dollar Index, which measures the strength of the greenback against a basket six currencies, has risen, making metals denominated in dollars more expensive for investors who use other?currencies.

Stocks were high, which also affected prices. LME copper stock The total rose to 253,600 tonnes after an additional 4,000 tons were imported from?the United States' and South Korea. This is the highest total since March 2025 and comes after the Comex premium, which brought copper into the U.S., evaporated.

Meyer stated that "lots?of copper off-market has been thrown into warehouses to increase visibility and possibly catch higher prices."

The entire base metals industry was in?red. Aluminium dropped 0.8% to $3.146 per ton. Zinc fell 0.6% to $3.368. Lead?lost 0.2 % to $1.987. Nickel dropped 2.1% to $17.700 a tonne. Tin shed 0.5% to $53,450. (Reporting and editing by Rashmi, Sonia Cheema, and Jane Merriman; Additional reporting by Lewis Jackson; and Dylan Duan.)

(source: Reuters)