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Copper prices set to rise this week as demand offsets macro-headwinds

The copper price was set to rise despite the drop on Friday, as tighter supplies and a bullish mood helped counteract wider macroeconomic concerns linked to 'the Iran War' and 'inflation.

Benchmark -three-month copper at the London Metal Exchange fell 1.34%, to $13,745 per metric ton as of 0700 GMT. The week-over-week increase was 0.7%.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange's most active copper contract fell by 0.46%, to 105150 yuan (15,521.90 dollars) per tonne.

Daniel Hynes is a senior commodity analyst at ANZ. He said that copper has been resilient to macroeconomic headwinds. "Structurally driven demand offsets cyclical 'weakness,'" he wrote in a report.

ANZ stated?on Friday that it expects the copper price to rise to $14,000 a tonne by year's end, with demand growing from?the AI infrastructure and energy transition in the medium-term.

On Thursday, there were large orders placed to remove copper from LME's warehouses. This trend has been continuing for the past few months.

LME copper inventories The COMEX Copper stocks in the U.S. fell to their lowest level since April 2 at 379,975 tonnes. The number of short tons (642,709 tons) rose to 642,709 tons.

Hynes stated that "non-U.S. copper exchange inventories (LME, SHFE, etc.) have actually been decreasing over the last few months."

Investors were also waiting for a possible recommendation by the Department of Commerce of the United States on tariffs that could be imposed on imported refined copper. This is due at the end of this month.

Hezbollah, a militia backed by Iran, rejected a ceasefire on 'Thursday in Lebanon, sapping the optimism that had been generated earlier that day when Israel and Lebanon were reported to have agreed to a ceasefire.

Aluminium fell by 0.56% on the LME, while zinc dropped by 0.81%. Lead dropped by 0.45% and nickel was down 0.9%. Tin dropped 2.59 %.

Aluminium fell 0.33% on the?SHFE. Zinc lost 0.88%. Lead lost 0.42%. Nickel dropped 1.64%. Tin plunged 5.35%.

(source: Reuters)