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Copper prices rise as Fed cuts are fueled by soft US data

Copper prices rise as Fed cuts are fueled by soft US data
Copper prices rise as Fed cuts are fueled by soft US data

Copper prices rose on Wednesday, as weak U.S. economic data raised expectations for a Federal Reserve rate cut in December. Meanwhile, a Chinese senior industry official warned of the halting of smelting and cautioned against ultra-low fees.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange's most traded copper contract closed the daytime trading session up 0.20%, at 86 590 yuan per metric ton ($12 230.05).

As of 0703 GMT, the benchmark three-month copper price on London Metal Exchange had increased by 0.46% to $10,868 per tonne.

The market received a boost as the September economic data, which was released on Tuesday but delayed because of a government shut down, showed a cooling in retail sales and inflation. This supported a rate cut for December by the Fed.

Commerce Department data shows that U.S. retail sale rose by 0.2% in September, but missed the forecast of 0.4%.

In a speech delivered on Wednesday at the World Copper Conference Asia 2025 by Vice President Chen Xuesen, the China Nonferrous Metals Industry warned against the negative treatment of copper concentrate. The association was against the negative processing.

He noted that China had also halted construction of new smelting capacities of 2 million tons.

Nickel, tin, and lead were all unchanged. Aluminium, too, was not much changed.

The other London metals were up 0.41 percent, zinc 0.25%, lead 0.39% and nickel 0.11%. ($1 = 7.0801 Chinese Yuan Renminbi). (Reporting and editing by Dylan Duan, Lewis Jackson)

(source: Reuters)