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Copper reaches four-week peak, on course for seventh consecutive monthly increase

Copper reaches four-week peak, on course for seventh consecutive monthly increase
Copper reaches four-week peak, on course for seventh consecutive monthly increase

Prices of copper hit a 4-week high on Friday and are on course for a 7th consecutive monthly gain. Demand optimism has outweighed worries about stocks piling up in warehouses registered at major exchanges.

The benchmark three-month copper price on the 'London Metal Exchange' rose by 1.3% in open-outcry official trading to $13,482 per metric ton after reaching $13,527, its highest level since January 30.

After a wave speculative purchases, the metal used for power and construction reached a record high on January 29, reaching $14,527.50. One metals trader stated that base metals were also supported by the?investment need for hard assets' since October.

After the Lunar New Year holiday, the first data released showed that the copper stock in Shanghai Futures Exchange warehouses reached a ten-year high. This was because end-users reduced their buying and the high prices deterred some downstream demand.

ShFE copper stocks Totaled 391,529 tons on Friday. This is up 44% compared to a week ago. Zinc Aluminium Stocks were up by 45% and 20% respectively.

UBS analysts stated that even though Chinese copper demand is down since September, global trends towards renewable energy, and the emerging demand for data centres, are expected to provide a secular support for copper.

UBS expects spot copper to reach $15,000 per ton in 13 months. The global copper demand is expected to rise 2.8% by 2026, and the market deficit will increase to 520,000 tonnes this year, up from 203,000 ton in 2025.

Tin, among other LME metals, rose 4.9% to $57,125 per ton, in official 'activity. Tin prices are up by 42% on account of supply concerns.

Aluminium?rose by 0.2% to $3163 per ton. Discount for LME cash aluminium contract against benchmark Analysts at Marex wrote in a recent note that the discount has been reduced over the last two weeks due to concerns about a possible disruption of supply via the Strait of Hormuz. The discount last stood at $15 per ton on Friday. It was down from $36 on February 17.

Zinc fell 0.9% to $3,348 per ton, while lead slipped 0.5% to 1,975 dollars and nickel rose 1.1% to 17,880 dollars. (Reporting and editing by David Goodman.)

(source: Reuters)