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Copper reaches a record high, as concerns over supply outweigh dollar strength

The copper price rose to a record high on Wednesday as supply concerns overshadowed a stronger dollar. Meanwhile, tin prices also reached a record high due to speculative purchases amid a growing geopolitical unrest.

After hitting a record high of 105,650 Yuan per metric tonne earlier in the morning, the most-traded contract for copper on the Shanghai Futures Exchange ended the morning session 1.68% higher, at 104970 yuan.

Benchmark three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange rose 1.55% to $13,367.5 a ton at?0340 GMT. This is a slight retreat from a record high of $13,400 per ton.

Copper's resiliency in price is attributed to disruptions at the mines, concerns about deficits for this year and a?flow of copper into the U.S. before?potential tariffs which are reducing supply elsewhere.

On Tuesday, U.S. president Donald Trump urged Iranians protesters to continue their protests and said that help was on its way.

Analysts say that this has fueled concerns about geopolitical risk, which is why some investors are rushing to commodities like copper and tin with solid fundamentals.

A stronger dollar has capped the price increases. It makes goods priced in greenbacks more expensive for buyers who use other currencies.

The tin price in both the Shanghai and London stock exchanges has reached record levels.

SHFE tin soared up to 8%, hitting the upper limit of 413 170 yuan. LME tin rose more than 5% at $52,495.

SHFE aluminium increased by 1.12%. Nickel advanced by 1.47%. Lead rose 0.2%. Zinc increased 1.05%.

Aluminium, nickel, and lead all rose in price on the LME. Zinc also rose by 1.22%.

(source: Reuters)