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Shanghai copper catches up to Freeports; prices are high but still limit gains

Shanghai copper catches up to Freeports; prices are high but still limit gains

Shanghai copper prices rose on Friday, with supply disruptions a concern following Freeport's declaration of force majeure. However, gains were limited due to weaker demand and high prices.

As of 0212 GMT, the most traded copper contract on Shanghai Futures Exchange rose 0.48%, trading at 82470 yuan (11,559) a metric ton.

As of 0212 GMT, the benchmark three-month price for copper at the London Metal Exchange had increased by 0.03%. It was now $10,263 per ton.

Shanghai copper prices rose to their highest level in a year on Thursday, after Freeport announced that it expects its Indonesian unit’s production will be 35% less than originally estimated by 2026.

Analysts at Chinese broker Haitong Futures stated that the high prices are due to restocking in anticipation of China's National Day Holiday from October 1 through October 8. This is expected to have an impact on demand. Further gains in copper prices will depend on downstream acceptance of high prices.

A state-run news outlet reported that China was studying ways to regulate its capacity for copper smelting. Chen Xuesen is vice chairman of the China Nonferrous Metals Industry Association.

Chen said that copper enterprises should oppose a "style of involution" competition which is detrimental to both the industry as well as the country.

Nickel, lead, and zinc were all down, but aluminium, tin, and zinc remained unchanged.

Nickel fell 0.87% for SHFE base metals. Zinc rose 0.3%. Lead dropped 0.18%. Aluminium and Tin were little altered.

(source: Reuters)