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Copper gets on China need, raw material supply concerns

Copper prices rose on Tuesday, supported by improving need outlook from leading customer China and looming issues of raw material supplies.

Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange was up 1.1% to $8,964 per metric load by 0128 GMT, resuming trading after a vacation and Easter holiday.

The most-traded May copper agreement on the Shanghai Futures Exchange included 0.4% to 73,140 yuan ($ 10,115.48) per metric ton, not far from an all-time high of 73,530 yuan touched on March 22.

Shanghai copper taped its finest daily gain in two weeks on Monday after an official study revealed China's manufacturing activity expanded for the very first time in 6 months in March.

Although trading was subdued because of the holiday, sentiment improved with worries of more supply tightness of copper concentrate, ANZ experts kept in mind.

Somewhere else, LME aluminium pushed 0.1% greater to $ 2,339 per heap, nickel acquired 1.4% to $16,985, zinc was up 0.9% to $2,461.50 per load, tin added 1.6%. to $27,880, while lead lost 1% to $2,035.50.

Stronger-than-expected U.S. manufacturing information on Monday. pushed Treasury yields greater and led financier concerns over the. timing of rate of interest cuts by the Federal Reserve.

SHFE aluminium steadied at 19,725 yuan a load, zinc. was 0.7% greater at 21,060 yuan, nickel rose. 2.3% to 133,020 yuan, and tin climbed 1.2% to 228,450. yuan, while lead decreased 0.8% to 16,465 yuan.

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(source: Reuters)