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Copper reaches record high on supply concerns ahead of Fed decision

Prices of copper reached record levels on Monday, as the lower dollar in anticipation of the Federal Reserve meeting this week led to a rush of purchases. Concerns about future shortages also fueled optimism.

Benchmark copper at the London Metal Exchange rose 0.3% to $11,657 per metric ton by 1057 GMT, from a previous peak of $11,771 per ton. This represents a gain in excess of 30% for this year.

The U.S. Central Bank is expected to reduce rates. The U.S. dollar will be affected, and when it falls the price of metals priced in dollars becomes cheaper for holders other currencies. This relationship is used by funds as a way to generate buy-and-sell signals based on numerical models.

The mine supply disruptions of recent years, such as the accident at Freeport-McMoRan's giant Grasbery Mine in Indonesia, are partially responsible for the expected deficits.

The rest of the world has also seen a tightening of supplies as traders have shipped copper to the United States due to higher Comex prices ahead of U.S. president Donald Trump's proposed import tariffs.

The U.S. tariffs on metals used in construction and power remain under review. An update is due by June.

The copper inventories at the Comex-approved warehouses are now a record 436,853 metric tons or short tons. On Friday, the number of people who attended church has increased by more than 300% compared to March.

Macquarie analysts estimate that there are roughly 335,000 additional tons of metals sitting in storage in the U.S.

Macquarie stated that the metal had been transferred into Comex warehouses, and November imports were lower than usual before Section 232.

The market surplus is 400,000 to 600,000 tonnes per year, if you allow for the transfer of stocks. It's a problem that the majority of this stock is in America, causing artificial shortages elsewhere.

Other metals saw aluminium slip 0.1%, to $2.895 per ton. Zinc gained 0.4%, to $3.110. Lead added 0.4%, to $2.011, while tin rose 0.3%, to $40.175. Nickel slipped by 0.1%, to $14.930. (Reporting and editing by Leroy Leo; Pratima Dasai)

(source: Reuters)