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Copper reaches 5-month high thanks to Chinese stimulus measures and weaker dollar

Copper reaches 5-month high thanks to Chinese stimulus measures and weaker dollar

The copper price hit its highest in five months Monday. Supported by the latest stimulus plan of top metals consumer China, and a lower dollar, traders are awaiting clarity about U.S. trade risks and their impact on global growth.

The benchmark three-month copper price on the London Metal Exchange rose 0.9% by 1710 GMT to $9,870 per metric ton, its highest level since October 8.

U.S. Comex Copper Futures rose 1.4% to $4.96 a lb.

China released new data on Monday, following the announcement of an "action plan special" for boosting domestic consumption.

Ewa Manthey, commodities analyst at ING, said: "The latest data shows that Chinese consumption and investment as well as industrial production have exceeded expectations for January-February."

"Yet, the property market, which is a major pillar of metals demand, has not yet reached its bottom." China's existing and new home prices have continued to fall month-on-month.

The main downside risk to the growth-dependent sector was the U.S. tariffs on imports and the global trade wars that are escalating.

U.S. president Donald Trump has said that he does not intend to create exemptions for steel and aluminum tariffs, and that sectoral and reciprocal tariffs will take effect on April 2.

Trump had previously ordered an inquiry into the possibility of new tariffs being imposed on copper. This inflated the premium for Comex copper over LME copper contract, which last stood at $1,067 per ton.

On Monday, the dollar was hovering near its lowest level in five months. Retail sales in the United States increased marginally in February, as consumers cut back on discretionary purchases. This reflected the increasing uncertainty about the economy.

It's all about Wednesday's U.S. Federal Reserve Meeting, where the central bank will likely hold interest rates at the same level.

LME aluminium rose 0.4% to $2,692 per ton.

Daily LME data revealed that stocks in warehouses registered with the LME fell by 4,525 tonnes to 497.275 tons. This is the lowest level since May. China's aluminum production increased 2.6% in January-February to 7.32 millions tons.

Other metals saw a 0.4% decline in zinc to $2,961 per ton. Tin fell 0.8% at $35,015, and nickel dropped 0.4% at $16,400. Lead rose 0.8% to 2,085. Reporting by Polina Devlin in London, Additional reporting by Violet Li and Eric Onstad from Shanghai and London. Editing by David Goodman and Shreya Biwas.

(source: Reuters)