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LONDON: Copper rallied to its highest in nearly seven years on Thursday on hopes that a vaccine for the coronavirus would galvanise global markets and boost demand for the industrial metal. Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange was up 1.3% to $7,398 a tonne by 1706 GMT, after hitting $7,410 a tonne, its highest since Jan. 2, 2014.

The metal, widely used in power and construction industries, has rallied about 70% since its March lows. AstraZeneca, Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna have all reported positive results in their coronavirus vaccine trials.

"Copper's rise is generally macro driven because of the vaccine and risk sentiment remains upbeat ... We are seeing synchronised gains across all metals," said ING analyst Wenyu Yao.

"Fundamentals look good but it's the funds that are having enthusiasm for copper particularly right now."

A softer dollar also buoyed metals, as it makes commodities priced in the currency more attractive to holders of other currencies.

Speculators bet on prices rising further, with the net spec long in LME copper at 20.4% of open interest as at Tuesday's close, highs not seen since 2017, according to broker Marex Spectron. On-warrant copper stocks in warehouses monitored by the LME hit their lowest in two months, down 600 tonnes to 102,425 tonnes.

The Yangshan copper premium climbed to $52 a tonne, compared with an April 2017 low of $46 a tonne touched two weeks ago, pointing to an uptick in China demand. A surge in scrap metal usage could slash global demand for primary aluminium and copper, Wood Mackenzie said.

The price difference between three-month aluminium contracts on the ShFE and LME hit $138.80 a tonne, the highest since February 2014. LME aluminium rose 0.3% to $1,975 a tonne, zinc was steady at $2,757, lead added 0.4% to $2,039, tin climbed 0.3% to $18,880, while nickel climbed 1.3% to $16,260.

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