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The dollar is weakening, and the Middle East has not escalated.

The weakened?dollar helped copper to rise on Friday. This eased fears about a spate of?tit-fortat strikes between Iran and the U.S.

The benchmark three-month copper price on the London Metal Exchange rose 0.29% to $13,528 per metric tonne by 0300 GMT. The Shanghai Futures Exchange's most traded copper contract rose by 1.61%, to 103950 yuan (about $15,334.80).

This week, the LME saw a 1.2% rise. It was a volatile week in which fears of inflation and macroeconomic risks were raised by a new round of fighting between the U.S.

The dollar is on course to drop for a third day in a row, which will support copper prices by making them cheaper for buyers who use other currencies.

John Williams, the New York Federal Reserve president, downplayed on Thursday the inflationary impact caused by the latest Middle East conflict.

Copper, a metal that is dependent on growth and heavily influenced by inflation and interest rates, has a high price. Interest rates that are higher dampen the demand for industrial metals like copper by reducing economic activity.

Aluminium gained 0.55% at the LME, and 0.67% at the SHFE. Prices for light metals are expected to reach their highest level since April with a rise of more than 4% on the LME.

Stockpiles of aluminium have been dwindling due to disruptions in Middle East supply. The Middle East, which is home to 9% of the world's smelting capacity, has lost production. This has helped push the market into deficit.

Total LME aluminium stocks The lowest levels since 2022.

LME zinc rose 0.06% after rallying over 3% on Friday?on reports of a fire at a South Korean Smelter. The SHFE price also gained 1.32%.

Lead added 0.18% to the?LME, nickel added 0.29 and tin ticked up by 0.1%.

Nickel gained 1.13% while tin grew 2.38%.

(source: Reuters)