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Copper reaches record highs as robust US GDP data boosts prospects

Prices of copper rose to new highs as the U.S. economy grew, boosting?demand for the metal. Supply constraints also boosted prices.

As of 0723 GMT the?most active copper contract at Shanghai Futures Exchange had closed daytime trading?up 2.3% to 95,080 Yuan ($13.551.88) per kilogram, after reaching a record high earlier in session of 96.510 yuan.

The benchmark three-month Copper on the London Futures Exchange increased 1.3% to $12,220.0 per ton. The price of copper reached a record-high earlier in the day, when it hit $12,282.0 per ton.

The contract's annual increase has been 39% due to the U.S. Dollar weakness,?bets on further Fed rate reductions, the growing demand for AI, and the renewable energy transformation, as well as mine supply disruptions which have fuelled speculative investments in the metal.

The U.S. economic growth accelerated in the third quarter. This was mainly due to a strong rebound in exports and robust consumer spending.

According to Chinese market information providers last month, China's leading copper smelters are planning to reduce production by more than 10% in 2026, to combat overcapacity, which has led to an increase in copper concentrate processing costs.

Investors bet that the Fed could cut rates even further next year, despite the fact that some of its peers were expected to increase.

Nickel, one of the SHFE's base metals,?extended its gains for a six-session period, climbing 4.8% to reach 126,650 Yuan per ton, and reaching a nearly nine-month high earlier.

The London benchmark nickel rose 0.7% to $15,845/t after hitting a seven-month peak of $15,980/t.

Aluminium, zinc, and lead all increased in Shanghai. Tin remained the same.

Aluminium was up 0.9%, zinc was 1% higher, lead was 0.8% higher and tin was also 1.2% higher.

(source: Reuters)