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Copper hits multi-month low on growing Chinese need fears

Copper rates extended their fall to a seventh consecutive session on Tuesday to hit their lowest in three and a half months on growing concern over need in leading customer China.

Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange ( LME) dropped 0.6% to $9,159.50 a metric ton by 1626 GMT after hitting $9,110.50 for its lowest since April 3.

Chinese demand is soft, which has actually held true for a. while, said Dan Smith, head of research at Amalgamated Metal. Trading.

Two elements set off lower prices. One is dissatisfaction. about the Chinese (Communist Celebration's) 3rd plenum, as there was. hope that it would lift the market.

He likewise pointed to algorithmic computer trading designs,. stating they had actually started triggering a sell signal.

Recently's plenum, a key political meeting, failed to lay. out more policies to prop up need for metals. Chinese shares. registered their most significant one-day drop in 6 months on Tuesday.

Versus a background of suppressed domestic consumption, Chinese. copper producers shipped a record 157,751 tons last month,. contributing to higher inventories in LME-registered warehouses,. weighing on costs.

LME copper stocks grew to 236,700 loads, LME information shows. That. is the highest considering that September 2021, improved by shipment of. 2,350 loads to two Asian storage facilities near China. << MCUSTX-TOTAL > The surplus>

in the global refined copper market expanded to. 416,000 heaps in the January to May period, from 154,000 tons in. the same duration in 2015, according to the International Copper. Study hall.

In other metals, aluminium was stable at $2,300 a. heap, zinc lost 1.1% to $2,695, tin dropped 1.3%. to $29,440 and nickel was down 0.7% at $16,070 while. lead slipped by 1.2% to $2,057.

Citi delivered big quantities of lead to LME-approved. storage facilities in Singapore on Monday for profitable monetary. deals, three sources familiar with the matter stated.

(source: Reuters)