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Nickel reaches 14-month high, copper claws up

Prices of copper jumped on Tuesday, as speculators re-started their buying spree. However, they remained well below the record highs set in the previous session. Some investors were concerned that end users might hold back on purchases.

The benchmark three-month copper price on the London Metal Exchange rose 3.1% by 1700 GMT to $12 606 per metric ton, after hitting a record high of $12 960 on Monday.

A?trader' said that copper?got a lift as U.S. funds resumed their buying at the opening of the U.S. stock market. This was amid renewed risk-on sentiment on financial markets. European shares hit record highs following a...subdued Asian session and gold bounced back.

LME copper prices have risen 43% in the past year. This is due to a combination of factors, including a weaker US dollar, concerns about mine disruptions affecting?supply and heavy speculative buying.

Analysts at Sucden Financial wrote in a report that "base metals will likely remain headline and flow driven, with the upside susceptible to profit-taking before liquidity improves early in January."

The price of copper in China fell as a result of a weaker Chinese market.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange's most traded contract closed the daytime trading at 98.090 yuan per ton, down 2.4%.

The Yangshan copper is a premium The Chinese appetite for copper imports fell to $53 per ton, down from $55 a week earlier, but still an improvement over the $40 it was at in mid-October.

LME nickel rose 6.1% to $16,780 per ton on short-covering amid fears about reduced production from top producer Indonesia. It reached an intraday high of $16,855, its highest since October 2024.

A minister said that the Indonesian government will cut mining output quotas to help support commodity prices.

The most active nickel contract in Shanghai rose 3.9% to 132 390 yuan per ton after reaching a nine-month high of 134 480 yuan.

LME aluminium rose 1% to 2,982.50 per ton. Zinc gained 1.3% at $3,128.50. Lead increased 0.3% to $2,000 and tin increased 3% to $40,965.

(source: Reuters)