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Copper drops as short-covering evaporates

Copper drops as short-covering evaporates

Investors and traders closed out their rolling positions in anticipation of the contract expiration this week, which caused copper prices to fall on Monday.

The price of three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange dropped 0.9% by 1040 GMT to $9,393 per metric ton, after reaching its highest level in three months last Friday, $9,684.50.

Traders scrambled on Friday to cover short positions ahead of the expiration of contracts on Tuesday, driving up LME Copper and triggering an explosive move in a critical spread.

Traders said that the majority of Friday's activity was a rollover from the expiring contract for February to March.

Robert Montefusco, broker at Sucden Financial, said: "After Friday's manic February/March roll the market has calmed down today."

He added that technical selling was also a factor in the LME copper price after it broke below the 200-day moving median, which is a bearish sign.

The spread between cash LME copper and benchmark 3-month futures For the first time since 19 months, prices spiked on Friday to as high as $249 per ton, but then dropped to $50 on Monday.

Fears that U.S. president Donald Trump could impose tariffs against copper had prompted traders and investors alike to purchase copper at the U.S. COMEX and sell it on the LME.

The COMEX premium over LME copper rose to $1002 per ton from $913 on the previous Friday.

Other metals include LME aluminium, which fell 0.6% to $2622 per ton. Zinc was unchanged at $2842, while tin was down 0.7% to $30,445. Nickel dropped 0.4% to $14,410. Lead rose 0.8% to $1999.50. (Reporting and editing by David Evans; Additional reporting by Eric Onstad)

(source: Reuters)