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Copper prices rise as Fed rates are influenced by US job data

The price of copper edged up after a three day decline on Wednesday as investors awaited delayed U.S. employment data. However, uncertainty about the Federal Reserve’s rate decision kept gains in check.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange's most active copper contract closed the daytime trading at 86,080 Yuan ($12106.72) per ton. This is a 0.17% increase.

As of 0718 GMT, the benchmark three-month price for copper at the London Metal Exchange increased by 0.25%.

Investors are cautiously trading ahead of the official U.S. September job data, which was delayed due to the government shutdown. This is a crucial reference for the direction of the country's interest rate policy ahead of December's Federal Reserve call.

Fed officials are pushing back against the notion that a rate cut in December was a done-deal, leaving the markets uncertain about one of the main pillars which supported its previous rally.

Copper was also supported by concerns about supply, which were sparked worldwide by mine interruptions.

Freeport-McMoRan announced on Tuesday it will resume production in Indonesia's Grasberg Mine by July 2026. This is in line with its previous guidance. The mine was shut down after a mudslide that claimed the lives of seven workers.

Freeport anticipates that copper and gold production in 2026 will be similar to levels of 2025.

The stronger Chinese currency helped stabilize the market, as it made commodities priced in dollars cheaper for Chinese investors.

Official data released on Tuesday showed that China's refined output of copper in October decreased 4.9% from month to month but registered an annual increase of 8.9%.

Aluminium, zinc, nickel, tin, and lead were the only metals to show a loss.

The LME saw a slight increase in aluminium, while lead, nickel, tin, and zinc were all up. $1 = 7.101 Chinese Yuan Renminbi (Reporting and editing by Ronojoy Mazumdar, Lewis Jackson and Tom Daly).

(source: Reuters)