Copper treads lower

NEW DELHI- Copper prices fell slightly on Thursday, easing from near six-week highs, as the US dollar firmed up on economic data that signaled the Federal Reserve will likely wait longer before cutting interest rates.

Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange (LME) was down 0.4 percent  at $8,236 a metric ton.

Meanwhile, the most-traded December copper contract on the Shanghai Futures Exchange (SHFE) edged up 0.1 percent  to 67,760 yuan ($9,336.29) a ton.

The dollar drew support from better-than-expected retail sales numbers and more signs of cooling inflation, feeding into the narrative for an economic ‘soft landing’ which would allow the Fed more time before cutting rates.

A stronger greenback makes dollar-priced commodities more expensive for holders of other currencies.

Copper prices had touched a near-six week high on Wednesday after positive industrial production data from top consumer China boosted sentiment, but gains were constrained by weakness in the country’s property sector and a stronger dollar.

“Rising expectations of further stimulus from China provided a further boost to the complex,” ING said in a note.

LME aluminum eased 0.3 percent  to $2,227 a ton, nickel fell 0.2 percent  to $17,385, zinc eased 1.3 percent  to $2,622.50, lead decreased 0.7 percent  to $2,229.50 and tin shed 0.5 percent  to $25,195.

SHFE aluminum eased 0.4 percent  to 18,955 yuan a ton, nickel was down 0.5 percent  at 138,400 yuan, zinc declined 0.3 percent  to 21,740 yuan, while lead gained 1.6 percent  to 16,720 yuan and tin edged down 0.2 percent  to 213,260 yuan.

spot_img

Share post: