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Demand offsets macro-headwinds to drive copper prices higher at the end of this week

The price of copper was expected to rise despite the?drop on Friday. Tighter supplies and a?bullish mood helped to offset macroeconomic worries related to?the Iran War and inflation. Benchmark three-month Copper on the?London Metal Exchange fell 1.23% at $13,761 per metric ton as of 0300 GMT. This still represents a 0.8% rise for the week.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange's most active copper contract fell 0.39%, to 105230 yuan (15,529.81 dollars) per ton.

Daniel Hynes is a senior commodity strategist at ANZ. He wrote a note Friday that copper has shown?resilience to macroeconomic headwinds. "Structurally driven demand offsets cyclical weaknesses," he said. ANZ said on Thursday that it expects copper prices to rise to $14,000 per ton by the end of the year, as demand from energy infrastructure and AI will accelerate in the medium-term.

On Thursday, there were large orders to remove copper from LME warehouses. This trend has continued in recent 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 wrote that "Non US (that is, LME and SHFE) Copper Exchange inventories have actually?been decreasing over the last few months." Investors are also awaiting a report from the U.S. Department of Commerce on possible tariffs for imported refined copper. This is due at the end of the month.

Hezbollah, a militia backed by Iran, rejected a ceasefire on Thursday in Lebanon, sapping the optimism generated by Israel's and Lebanon's reported agreement earlier that day.

The price of oil increased by 0.86% last Friday.

Aluminium fell by 0.37%. Zinc dropped by 0.78%. Lead dropped by 0.42%. Nickel dropped by 0.42%. Tin dropped 1.6%.

Other SHFE metals include aluminium, which fell 0.21%; zinc, which dropped 0.82%; lead, which lost 0.52%; nickel, a whopping 1.46%, and tin, a whopping 4.25%.

(source: Reuters)