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Copper trades near $13,000 after Christmas in a record-breaking catch-up.

Copper trades near $13,000 after Christmas in a record-breaking catch-up.
Copper trades near $13,000 after Christmas in a record-breaking catch-up.

The sharp rally that occurred in Shanghai last week spilled over into a global market that was curtailed by the Christmas holiday.

As of 0250 GMT the benchmark three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange had risen 5.86%, to $12,875 a metric ton, after having set a session record of $12960.

After briefly touching a record high of 102.660 yuan, the most active copper contract at the Shanghai Futures Exchange surged 3.43%, to 101.480 yuan.

The London benchmark copper contracts?is closing with gains made by the Shanghai contract while the London exchange was closed for the Christmas holiday.

Shanghai copper rose 5.81% in the last week while London copper gained a gain of 1.93%.

The low prices due to the supply shortage led a group of China's leading smelters to decide on Thursday not to provide guidance for copper concentrate processing charges in the first quarter of 2019. Meanwhile, China announced on Friday that it would limit its copper production capacity in the next 5-year plan to support gains in Shanghai copper.

The traders who bet on the Fed cutting interest rates by two more times also supported the Monday rally. They are waiting for the minutes of the Fed's December meeting to be released on Tuesday in order to get clues about how the policy makers plan on balancing the risks of both inflation and a weakening labour market.

All metals experienced a year-end rally on Monday.

Aluminium rose by 0.96% on the London market. Zinc gained 1.33%. Lead advanced 1.15%. Nickel advanced 1.23%. Tin climbed by 2.01%.

Aluminium, zinc, lead, nickel, and tin all advanced in the SHFE base metals.

(source: Reuters)