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Copper edges higher on fund purchasing, however tariff concerns cap gains

Copper costs made modest gains on Wednesday as some funds dipped into the market, however unpredictability about possible tariffs on the world's biggest metals consumer China kept the rise in check.

Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange ( LME) was up 0.2% at $9,019 per metric heap by 1100 GMT, holding above the $8,757 five-month low touched last week.

The market is actually trying to comprehend how aggressive these prospective tariffs could be and I believe the issue is no one really knows the response, said Nitesh Shah, product strategist at WisdomTree.

Lots of financiers were on the sidelines after contrasting reports about plans by U.S. President-elect Donald Trump regarding tariffs.

During the campaign Trump promised to impose tariffs of 60% on Chinese imports, however Trump on Monday denied a Washington Post report that said his assistants were checking out strategies that would just cover critical imports.

Alastair Munro, senior base metals expert at Marex, said copper discovered some support from contrarian purchasing from some Commodity Trade Consultant (CTA) mutual fund, which are largely driven by computer programs.

Likewise helping copper was a firm Yangshan copper premium << SMM-CUYP-CN >, which reflects demand for copper imported into China. It was last at $70 per load, up from $43 two months back.

A firmer dollar index, however, weighed on metals markets, making products priced in the U.S. currency more pricey for buyers using other currencies.

LME zinc was the worst entertainer, easing 0.9% to $ 2,850 a ton.

Munro stated the weak point was mostly due to offering connected to index rebalancing streams, a five-day regular monthly procedure that kicked off on Wednesday.

Among other metals, LME aluminium slipped 0.2% to $ 2,513 a heap, nickel acquired 0.3% to $15,450, lead was up 0.4% at $1,963 and tin included 0.6% to $ 30,110.

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(source: Reuters)