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Copper to gain for the second consecutive month on US-Iran Peace Deal Hopes

Shanghai copper prices rose on Friday as hopes for a U.S. Iran peace deal pushed the oil price?and dollar lower. This eased fears of higher inflation, and a global slowdown.

As of 0324 GMT, the most traded copper contract on the Shanghai Futures Exchange had risen?0.8% to 104,900 Yuan ($15472.55). The contract has increased by 3.7% this month.

The price of three-month copper at the London Metal Exchange remained unchanged at $13,699 per metric ton. Both contracts rose for the second consecutive month.

Sources told? that the United States and Iran had reached an agreement on Thursday to extend their ceasefire, and lift restrictions on shipping in the Strait of Hormuz. However, President Donald Trump is yet to approve this deal, and Iranian state-run media has stated it was not finalized.

Tim Waterer is the chief market analyst for KCM Trade.

"A successful agreement could open the doors to stronger gains while any breakdown?risks reinitiating inflationary pressures?and capping upwards."

This week, the U.S. Dollar has fallen by 0.2%, making commodities priced in greenbacks cheaper for those who hold other currencies.

The price of crude oil fell by more than 10% on Friday in hopes that a lasting deal would be reached between the U.S.A. and Iran, which would reduce the risk of stagflation for the global economy. This, in turn, supported the outlook for copper.

People with knowledge of the situation said that China's central banks has instructed banks to increase lending in this month. This will boost copper market sentiment and underline Beijing's efforts to support an economy that is being squeezed by high energy costs and a stubbornly low domestic demand.

Jordan?Chua is a senior strategist with Phillip Nova. He said: "The overall?trend of base metals remains positive, but we can expect volatile, choppy, and news-driven trading during the next trading sessions."

Nickel lost 0.6%, while lead was stable. Aluminium gained 0.2% on the LME. Aluminum was up for a third consecutive?month due to supply disruptions caused by the conflict. Nickel was the only base metal that declined in May.

Aluminium rose by 0.2% among other SHFE metals. Zinc rose by 1.1%. Lead fell 0.5%. Nickel gained 0.1%. Tin rose 1.3%.

(source: Reuters)