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Markets Print edition: 2020-08-14

Copper prices ease

Published Updated
By

LONDON Copper prices eased on Thursday as concerns over supply from South America receded and seasonally weak demand in top consumer China resurfaced.

Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange fell 2.6% to $6,262 a tonne by 1640 GMT.

Covid-19 supply disruptions in top producer Chile and flooding in China helped propel copper to a two-year high in July but miners in the South American nation were ramping back up while neighbouring Peru was also restarting production after lockdowns.

"With supply concerns in Chile and Peru subsiding and the effects of China's fiscal impulse largely already felt, sentiment for copper has incrementally weakened," said BMO Capital Markets analyst Tim Wood-Dow.

The copper market returned its focus to fundamental data, leading it to trade in a narrow range of between $6,400-$6,500 for nearly six weeks, Commerzbank analysts said.

The Yangshan copper premium, an indicator of Chinese demand, stood at $76 a tonne, its lowest since April and down from $99 a month ago.

Weaker Chinese demand can be seen through rising copper stocks in ShFE warehouses, while a decline in inventories in LME warehouses lent prices some support.

The third quarter is seen as a traditionally seasonally weak period for Chinese demand, analysts say.

The US Republican White House and congressional Democrats have been in a deadlock for days trying to come up with a US coronavirus bill.

Prices were also pressured by US-China tensions ahead of a crucial weekend meeting between trade officials from both countries.

Chile's state-run miner Codelco, the world's largest copper producer, expects quick progress in ramping up processing capacity at its Chuquicamata underground project.

Aluminium edged down 1.5% to $1,761 a tonne, zinc shed 1.4% to $2,467, lead fell 0.4% to $1,959, tin was down 0.3% to $17,525, while nickel eased 1.1% to $14,100.-Reuters

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