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Copper rebounds on softer dollar, Middle East de-escalation hopes

Prices of copper rose on Wednesday as a weaker dollar and renewed hope for a 'de-escalation' in the Middle East war helped to boost?demand? prospects.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange's most traded copper contract ended daytime trading up 1.14%, at 95,590 Yuan ($13.864.67) per ton.

As of 0722 GMT, the benchmark three-month copper price on London Metal Exchange rose 1.19% to $12,244.5 per tonne. Both copper prices in Shanghai and London 'lost ground' on Tuesday, as rising energy prices and a protracted Iran war heightened concerns about inflation and global economic growth. The market sentiment improved significantly on Wednesday after U.S. president Donald Trump stated that the U.S. is'making progress' in its efforts to negotiate an end of the war with Iran. This includes winning an important concession by Tehran, without providing details. Iran, however, has rejected Trump's remarks, saying that the U.S. is negotiating with themselves.

The expectation of a deescalation in tensions between the U.S. "The expectation of a de-escalation between the?U.S.

It highlights the market's vulnerability due to geopolitical shifts, but a lot of uncertainty remains regarding U.S. - Iran negotiations.

The base metals complex also received a boost from a softer dollar, which made dollar-priced goods cheaper for buyers who used 'other currencies.

SHFE aluminium gained 0.63%. Nickel gained 1.08%. Lead advanced 0.3%. Tin climbed 1.91%. Zinc?edged downwards by 0.28%.

Nickel rose by 2.06% among other LME metals, while lead gained 0.5%. Tin grew by 0.64%. Zinc advanced 0.74%. Aluminium fell 0.41%.

(source: Reuters)