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Copper reaches two-week high amid hopes of a quick end to the Iran war

The copper price rose on Wednesday, reaching its highest level in the past two weeks amid hopes that the Iran war may be nearing an end.

Open-outcry official trading on the London Metal Exchange saw benchmark three-month copper rise 0.2% to a metric ton of $12,365 after hitting $12,492.50 - its highest level since March 18.

This was copper's fourth consecutive session of gains. However, it is still far below the record high of $14,527.50 that was reached on January 29, 2017. Ole Hansen is the head of commodity strategy for Saxo Bank, Copenhagen. "The market wants us to believe we are getting closer to a resolution to this escalation even though economic clouds still hang over?the?markets, which are grey and could worsen," he said. After President Donald Trump announced that the end of the war against Iran may be near, copper prices rose along with other financial markets.

The most active copper contract at the Shanghai Futures Exchange rose 1.5%, to 97.030 yuan (14,093.57) per tonne, after a jump to 97.250 yuan, the highest price since March 19. The metals market also received a boost on Wednesday from data showing that the manufacturing sector of China, the world's largest consumer of metals, expanded for a 4th consecutive month in March.

This came after an official survey showed that activity had grown at the fastest rate in a whole year.

The physical demand for copper is increasing as evidenced by the higher premiums and declining Chinese inventories.

Stocks monitored by SHFE The number of tons in the market fell for a second week in a row to 359 135 tonnes as of March 27, 2019.

Hansen said that this indicates that there was pent up demand, and that lower prices we achieved earlier in the month did prompt some buying.

A weaker dollar also helped metals gain. Dollar, which makes commodities backed by greenbacks more affordable to investors who use other currencies.

LME Aluminium initially dropped as investors believed that the supply problems from smelters in the Gulf would be resolved if war ended. Prices jumped 1.6% to $3,523 per ton in official activity after a consultant said that one major smelter ceased operations and another was only operating at 30%.

Other metals include LME Zinc, which rose 0.4% to $3240 per ton. Lead gained 1.3%, nickel grew 0.7%, and tin increased 2.1%, to $47745.

(source: Reuters)