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Copper retreats on firm dollar, profit-taking

Copper rates drew back on Friday on a stronger dollar and as financiers secured benefit from a recent rally ahead of the weekend.

Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange (LME). dropped 1.1% to $8,855.50 per metric ton by 1715 GMT.

It had rallied about 13% from early February, touching an. 11-month peak of $9,025.50 on Monday.

U.S. Comex copper futures dropped 1.2% to $4.01 a. pound.

It's been an extremely strong month and pull-backs are. inescapable, especially on days when the dollar is more powerful,. said Nitesh Shah, product strategist at WisdomTree.

The dollar index got after a week of reserve bank. statements, making products priced in the U.S. currency. more pricey for purchasers using other currencies.

Shah stated after short-term weakness and combination,. copper was likely to see more gains, particularly once central. banks in fact began cutting rate of interest.

I think the fundamentals stay firm, particularly after the. smelter lowerings in China begin to have an influence on metal. availability, he stated.

I anticipate costs to rise back above $9,000 and most likely hit. the $10,000 limit in a couple of months as well.

The most recent dive in prices was fuelled by news last week that. significant Chinese copper smelters reached a contract to lower. operation rates at some loss-making plants.

On Friday, nevertheless, state-backed research study home Antaike stated. China's yearly refined copper output will grow more than 3% this. year regardless of the smelter contract as general smelter capacity. has been using up.

To name a few metals, LME aluminium rose 0.2% to. $ 2,307 a lot, nickel dropped 2.2% to $17,150, zinc. reduced 1.6% to $2,485, tin lost 0.6% to $27,705. and lead slipped 0.6% to $2,039.

On a weekly basis, nickel and lead are the worst performers. across base metals on the LME, with nickel down almost 5% and. lead off 4% up until now.

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(source: Reuters)