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Copper's peak declines as the tightness panic fades

The price of copper fell slightly on Thursday, as traders reported that the panic caused by tight supplies this week has begun to subside.

As of 1030 GMT, the benchmark three-month copper price on London Metal Exchange had fallen 0.7% to $11,402.50 a metric tonne. It reached $11,529 in the early part of the session. This was just a few cents away from the high of $11,540 that it achieved on Wednesday.

LME data showed that on Thursday, 7,775 new warrants were cancelled in South Korea (0#MCUSTXLOC>), following a previous day's cancellation of more than 50 725 tons in Asia.

The spread between the LME Cash Copper Contract and the Three-Month Forward contract was reduced due to the cancellations or orders to remove metal from the warehouses On Wednesday, metal prices blew out to around $88 a ton, the highest level since mid-October. This indicates a strong demand for metals.

One trader said that the spread between March and now shouldn't be so tight, attributing Wednesdays rally to panic-buying.

Sucden Financial stated that the copper market balance for 2025 was still in a small surplus. However, even minor disruptions can now turn this into a deficit. The brokerage believes that the $10,830 mark will be the important floor for copper prices through the end of this year.

"Liquidity will continue to deteriorate into the holiday season." This, combined with increased speculative activity across the complex, increases the risk of large or disorderly movements, especially in thin markets, where spreads are tight, Sucden said.

Goldman Sachs has raised its forecast of the average LME copper prices for the first half 2026 from $10,415 to $10,710.

Other metals include tin, which fell 1.5%, to $40,105 per ton after reaching its highest level since April 2022 in earlier sessions. Aluminium dropped 0.4%, to $2,884.50, and zinc lost 0.6%, to $3,047.50.

Nickel increased by 0.3%, to $14,910. Lead rose 0.1%, to $2000.50. (Reporting and editing by Subhranshu Sahu, Harikrin Nair and Harikrin Nair; Additional reporting by Dylan Duan; Lewis Jackson and additional reporting by Dylan Duan)

(source: Reuters)