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China demand hopes drive copper prices to 2-month peak

  • Hopes for stronger copper consumption were raised by a pledge from China’s central bank to support the property sector, a major consumer of metals
  • The Yangshan copper premium hit US$100 a tonne last week and has more than tripled since the start of August, suggesting a need for China to import

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An employee manufactures copper wires at the workshop of Tongling Nonferrous Metals Group Holdings in Tongling, Anhui Province, China on November 13. Photo: VCG via Getty Images

Copper prices rose to their highest in nearly two months on Monday, buoyed by growing hopes of fresh stimulus and demand in China, a softer dollar and protests at a mine in Panama.

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Benchmark copper on the London Metal Exchange (LME) was up 0.9 per cent at US$8,344 a metric ton in official rings, having earlier touched US$8,355 for its highest since September 29.

Hopes for stronger copper consumption were raised by a pledge from China’s central bank to ensure financing support for the property sector, a major consumer of industrial metals.

“There’s a fair amount of stimulus in the pipeline and we are in a seasonally strong period,” said Dan Smith, head of research at Amalgamated Metal Trading.

“For me, copper demand looks strong in China, primarily in the green sectors. We know utilisation rates at wire rod plants picked up into mid-November.”

Sliding stocks of copper in warehouses monitored by the Shanghai Futures Exchange suggest healthy China demand, traders said. At 31,026 metric tons, they have dropped 90 per cent since February.

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