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Shanghai copper reaches record highs on signs of tight supply

Shanghai copper reaches record highs on signs of tight supply
Shanghai copper reaches record highs on signs of tight supply

Shanghai copper reached a record-high on Friday on signs that the 'feedstock supply' will be tighter next year and China's plans to curb irrational expansion of copper projects.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange's most active copper contract closed the daytime session up 3.6%, at 98720 yuan (US$14,083.34) per metric ton. It had earlier reached an all-time record of 99,730 dollars a ton.

The contract stipulated a gain of 6% per week.

The London benchmark reached a high of $12,282 Wednesday.

China's top economist said that the country will tighten up its oversight of new copper projects and alumina to stop irrational investments and unplanned expansion between 2026 and 2030.

Sources said that top Chinese copper smelters did not set guidance on copper concentrate processing charges for the first quarter 2026. The group has refused to set guidance for the first quarter of 2026 for the fourth consecutive time due to feedstock shortages.

Investors expect two more U.S. rate cuts in 2012, leading to continued weakness of the U.S. Dollar, which is hovering near its two-month lows.

Dollar-priced materials become more appealing to holders of currencies other than the dollar when the dollar is weaker.

Aluminium and lead were the two most significant gains among?SHFE's base metals.

Two sources said that the top aluminium producers have raised their premiums to Japanese buyers from $190 to $203 per metric ton to $210 to 225.

Japan is Asia's largest importer of light metals, and the premiums it agrees to each quarter above the London Metal Exchange cash price sets the benchmark for the area.

Zinc increased by 0.7% while nickel grew by 1.3%. Tin increased by 1.4%.

(source: Reuters)