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Copper set for weekly fall on strong dollar, issues about need prospects

Copper costs stayed close to a fiveweek low on Friday and were on track for a 2nd successive weekly decrease, under pressure from a strong dollar and concerns about demand prospects.

Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange (LME) was consistent at $8,884.50 per metric load by 1121 GMT.

The metal, utilized in power and building, is down 20% since May when financiers' speculative bets drove the cost to a record high of $11,104.5.

The focus towards the end of 2024 turned to a robust U.S. currency - which makes dollar-priced metals more costly for other currency holders, expectations of higher-for-longer U.S. rates, frustration over the scale of economic stimulus in leading consumer China, and the possibility of U.S. President-elect Donald Trump imposing import tariffs.

All these elements will stay headwinds for the growth-dependent commercial metals as they enter 2025, keeping prospects for demand development modest, stated Natalie Scott-Gray, senior metals expert at StoneX.

Copper and some other metals such as zinc may find support from the supply side as low processing costs challenge the profitability of Chinese smelters in 2025, though this aspect will still be limited by modest demand, she included.

So far, Peru stated it anticipates its 2025 copper production to remain flat for the 3rd straight year. Copper and zinc inventories in storage facilities monitored by the Shanghai Futures Exchange fell this week and are presently at the lowest given that February.

On the other hand, LME aluminium acquired 0.6% to $2,522 a. load, zinc reduced 0.1% to $2,965, lead was stable. at $1,971 and tin rose 1.2% to $28,705.

Nickel was up 0.4% at $15,170 after striking its. four-year low of $15,065. The market is on track for the 3rd. year of surplus in 2024, StoneX stated, as Indonesia, the greatest. producer, increases output.

(source: Reuters)