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Copper prices rise on the back of a weaker dollar

The copper price rose on Monday due to a weaker US dollar and concern over the global supply following an accident at the second largest mine in the world.

The benchmark three-month copper price on the London Metal Exchange rose 0.8% by 0951 GMT to $10,259.50 per metric ton. The metal has risen 3.6% in the last month, after reaching a 15-month peak of $10 485 on Thursday. Analysts have lowered their supply forecasts for 2020 and 2026 due to disruptions at the Grasberg Mine in Indonesia.

Standard Chartered analyst Sudakshina Unnikrishnan said, "We are still optimistic about copper prices prospects after the tightening in the copper concentrate markets due to the disruption at Grasberg and the force majeure." The Grasberg Minerals District suspended operations on 9 September after a fatal mud slide occurred at its largest underground mine. Dollar was pushed up by fears of a possible U.S. shutdown if Congress fails to pass a funding measure before Tuesday's fiscal year end. This made dollar-priced materials more attractive to buyers who use other currencies.

China, the world's largest metal consumer, said it aimed to increase non-ferrous metal production by 1.5% on average in this year and next. The average growth in production for 2023 and 2024 was set at 5%. A survey of economists revealed that China's industrial profit returned to growth in august, but factory activity likely shrank for the sixth consecutive month in September. The official purchasing managers' index is due Tuesday.

Other LME metals include aluminium, which rose by 0.5%, to $2669 per ton. Zinc gained 1.1%, to $2918.50; lead fell 0.3%, to $1997; tin increased 0.4%, to $34,615; and nickel, up 0.4%, to $15,230. (Reporting and editing by David Goodman Additional reporting by Dylan Duan)

(source: Reuters)