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Copper and other base metals are lifted by China factory data

On Wednesday, copper prices recovered from two sessions of losses due to better than expected private factory data from China, the top metals consumer.

The aluminium price rose to its highest level in more than a month, on the back of supply concerns resulting from the escalating conflict in the Middle East. This region is a major producer of this metal.

The benchmark three-month copper price on the London Metal Exchange rose 1.5%, to $13,150 per metric ton at 1030 GMT.

LME copper has fallen 3% in the last two sessions due to fears that the Mideast conflict will hinder economic growth and metals demands.

China's factory data is mixed. The official "purchasing managers' index" tracking large state owned manufacturers came in slightly lower.

The metals market was focused on the?second survey? of smaller private producers, which exceeded analysts' expectations, with new orders volumes increasing for the ninth consecutive month.

The PMIs were positive, and we are moving in the right direction with good orders, and positive growth. Robert Montefusco, broker at Sucden Financial, said that people are once again buying copper.

We've had some big swings in this week.

LME aluminium rose 1.7% to $3.305 per ton. It had reached $3.318 at its highest since January 29. Norsk Hydro, a Norwegian company, announced on Tuesday that it would be shutting down its joint venture for aluminium in Qatar.

LME aluminum has risen 5% this week, after Israel and the U.S. launched an attack against Iran at the weekend. Around 8% of the global aluminium production is produced in this region.

Ewa Manthey is a commodities strategist at ING. She said that the disruption has "hit a market which was already tight".

LME inventories are falling, premiums have risen and the spread between LME cash and benchmark three-month contracts has tightened. She added that the shortages began even before the war.

($1 = 6.9161 Chinese yuan renminbi) (Reporting by Eric Onstad, additional reporting by Lewis Jackson and Dylan Duan in China; Editing by Shailesh Kuber) ($1 = 6.9161 Chinese Yuan Renminbi)

(source: Reuters)