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Markets

Copper falls on rising inventories, fear of China's price control

  • However, China's January-March copper imports were the highest first-quarter amount since at least 2008, on rising demand and easing logistics issues.
Published April 13, 2021

HANOI: Copper prices fell on Tuesday, as increasing inventories in global exchanges and worries about possible governmental price control measures in top consumer China weighed on sentiment, despite data showing solid copper imports in the first quarter.

Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange fell 0.1% to $8,850 a tonne by 0543 GMT, while the most-traded May copper contract on the Shanghai Futures Exchange declined 0.3% to 65,890 yuan ($10,058.31) a tonne.

Inventories in LME-approved warehouses hit 165,625 tonnes, their highest since Nov. 11, while stockpiles in warehouses tracked by ShFE have been hovering around their 11-month high.

A rise in the prices of global commodities has led to Chinese top officials emphasizing the need to cap prices to reduce cost for firms and control inflation.

However, China's January-March copper imports were the highest first-quarter amount since at least 2008, on rising demand and easing logistics issues.

"(There's been) too much good news baked in, so much so that looking forward, there is expectation of tighter monetary conditions and (China's) State Reserve Bureau's release of supplies to help industrial firms cope with rising raw material cost," said a Singapore-based metals trader.

"But I think this is a dip to buy anything between here and $8,800 is worth picking up," the trader said, adding that data were backward looking.

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