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Most base metals eye weekly decrease on more powerful dollar

Costs of the majority of nonferrous metals fell on Friday and were on track for a weekly decrease as a. stronger dollar made greenbackpriced metals more expensive to. holders of other currencies.

Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange (LME). declined 0.6% to $8,894.50 per metric lot by 0858 GMT,. while the most-traded May copper agreement on the Shanghai. Futures Exchange (SHFE) closed down 0.8% to 72,290 yuan. ($ 10,002.77) a load.

The U.S. dollar was set for a 2nd week of broad gains,. after the Federal Reserve said it would not begin cutting. rate of interest up until it is more confident inflation is falling. sustainably, while expectations of rate cuts are priced in for. this year.

Metals rates ... show a specific level of sensitivity to shifts. in the U.S. dollar, experts at BMI, part of Fitch Solutions,. said in a note.

Nevertheless, they included that base metals costs are most likely to. stay supported by the longer trend of a weakening U.S. dollar. for the rest of 2024.

LME aluminium shed 0.5% to $2,289.50 a ton, nickel. dropped 1.4% to $17,300, zinc decreased 0.8% to. $ 2,505.50, tin lost 1% to $27,595, and lead. edged down 0.5% to $2,040.50.

SHFE aluminium ended up 0.1% to 19,400 yuan a heap,. tin increased 0.3% to 226,940 yuan, lead edged up. 0.2% to 16,235 yuan, while nickel dropped 1.6% to. 134,710 yuan and zinc fell 0.5% to 21,230 yuan.

On a weekly basis, nickel and tin are the worst entertainers. across all base metals on the LME, as supply disruption eased in. major producer Indonesia where minerals exports and production. resumed as more quotas were authorized after months of delays.

LME nickel fell 4% so far today, the worst given that Nov. 24, and LME has actually lost 4.4% week-on-week, set for the steepest. weekly decline considering that Sept. 29 last year.

The global nickel market had a surplus of 13,400 lots in. January, lower than a year previously and compared to December. 2023, information from the International Nickel Study Group revealed.

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(source: Reuters)