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Copper prices rise for the first time in 5 days due to China's buying and disruption fears

Prices rose for the first day in five on Wednesday, as Chinese demand and worries about disruptions to sulphuric and diesel supplies boosted prices.

In official open outcry, the benchmark three-month copper price on London Metal Exchange rose 0.3% to $13,072 per metric tonne.

SP Angel analyst John Meyer stated that prices are being supported by the concerns about the shortages of sulphuric acids, which is used in the production of around 20% of the world's copper due to the ongoing conflict.

Meyer stated that "China banned exports of acid?and copper miner in Chile gets a certain quantity of their acid form China." Chile is the largest mined copper producer in the world.

A trader stated that Chinese consumers have also been buying copper when the price drops, especially before a holiday.

The Shanghai Futures exchange will close for Labour Day on Friday and not open again until May 6

The International Copper Study Group reported on Tuesday that the global market for refined copper was still in surplus of 276,000 tons in February.

BNP Paribas stated in a report that "we see the oversupply of refined copper in 2025 continuing in 2026 and in 2027."

Bank of America is still raising its copper prices forecasts, with the base case being that prices will hit $14,000 per ton in this quarter. BNP Paribas stated that funds' interest in the metal "continues" to support prices above what is fundamentally justified.

Nickel was unchanged at $19450 per ton, after reaching its highest level since June 2024. The battery metal was supported by a reduction in production?in Indonesia where the sulphur crunch is also felt.

Aluminium increased 0.5%, to $3.555. This is not far from the four-year high of $3.672 that was reached on April 16,?due mainly to Middle East shortages. Zinc fell by 1.1%, to $3.322, while lead remained flat at $1.957, and tin rose 1.7%, to $49.775. (Reporting and editing by Subhranshu Sahu; Amy Lv, Lewis Jackson and Sharon Singleton; Additional reporting by Amy Lv; Lead was flat at $1,957; and Tin gained 1.7% to $49,775)

(source: Reuters)