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/2023.01.23
/Demand recovery hopes help copper towards seven-month high.txt
LONDON, Jan 23 (Reuters) - Copper prices rose on Monday, | |
heading back towards the seven-month highs seen last week on | |
improving prospects for demand in top consumer China, low | |
inventories and a weaker dollar.However, traders said activity was subdued due to the | |
Chinese Lunar new year holiday.Benchmark copper on the London Metal Exchange was up | |
0.3% at $9,349 a tonne at 1706 GMT. Prices of the metal used in | |
the power and construction industries rose to $9,550.50 last | |
week, the highest since June 6."Copper is up over 12% this year on positive sentiment | |
surrounding China's re-opening narrative, physical stockpile | |
shortages and a weaker dollar," said Giles Coghlan, an analyst | |
at broker HYCM."None of these look like changing much in the near term, but | |
it's a big week for U.S. earnings. If markets start to price in | |
a greater chance of a U.S. recession, that could weigh on | |
sentiment which could in turn impact copper's near term prices."Companies accounting for more than half the S&P 500's market | |
value are reporting over the next two weeks. Microsoft | |
results are due on Tuesday, followed by Elon Musk's Tesla | |
on Wednesday, while Apple and Google parent | |
Alphabet report next week.Also on the agenda this week is a spate of U.S. data on | |
growth, manufacturing and price pressures, which may yield clues | |
to the Federal Reserve's monetary policy intentions.Worries about supplies from Peru due to social unrest are | |
also helping to support copper prices.Demand for industrial metals overall is expected to pick up | |
soon after the Chinese holiday as companies restock ahead of a | |
pick-up in manufacturing activity.A lower U.S. currency makes dollar-priced metals cheaper for | |
holders of other currencies, which could subdue demand.Traders are watching copper inventories in LME-registered | |
warehouses <MCUSTX-TOTAL>, which at 78,300 tonnes are heading | |
towards 10-month lows hit last November.Cancelled warrants - metal earmarked for delivery - at 37% | |
of the total suggest more copper is due to leave LME warrant.In other metals, aluminium climbed 1% to $2,637, | |
zinc gained 0.2% to $3,427, lead slipped 1.7% to | |
$2,053, tin was down 0.1% to $29,505 and nickel | |
fell 2.2% to $28,140. | |
(Reporting by Pratima Desai; additional reporting by Neha | |
Arora; Editing by Jan Harvey and Chizu Nomiyama) |