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Copper and aluminium climb as dollar slips

Thursday, 18 April 2024



Copper and aluminium prices rose in London on Wednesday as support from a weaker US dollar offset concerns about demand from top metals consumer China, reports Reuters.
Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange was 0.8 per cent higher at $9,547 per tonne as of 1158 GMT, reversing Tuesday declines caused by slower-than-expected China's industrial output growth.
The metal, used in power and construction, is up 11.5 per cent since the start of 2024 after its March-April rally drove the price to $9,640.50, the highest level since June 2022, on Monday.
The dollar edged down but was still close to its 5-1/2-month high after Federal Reserve officials reiterated interest rates are likely to stay higher for longer. Weaker US currency makes dollar-denominated metals more attractive to buyers using other currencies.
LME aluminium was 0.3 per cent to $2,568 a ton as the market kept digesting the US and Britain's move to ban the LME and CME from accepting newly produced Russian aluminium. Aluminium touched $2,728, a 22-month high, on Monday.
As China's unwrought aluminium exports to the US have been tiny in recent years, the market largely ignored the news that US President Joe Biden would call for sharply higher tariffs on Chinese steel and aluminium as part of a package of policies aimed at pleasing steelworkers in the swing state of Pennsylvania.
However, the Biden administration would also press Mexico to prohibit China from selling its metal products indirectly through the US's southern neighbour.