Copper hits highest price in more than a week as China returns from holiday

Copper prices rose to ​their highest level in more than ​a week on Tuesday, propelled by positive sentiment and firmer demand ​in top metals consumer China, where markets reopened after a holiday.

Copper hits highest price in more than a week as China returns from holiday
Copper prices rose to their highest level in more than a week on Tuesday, propelled by positive sentiment and firmer demand in top metals consumer China, where markets reopened after a holiday.

Benchmark three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange had gained 2.2% to $13,155 a metric ton by 1525 GMT after touching its highest price since ‌February 12 ⁠at $13,196.

LME copper, ⁠which slipped 0.7% on Monday, has gained 22% over the past three months, but is well below ​a record high of $14,527.50 hit on January 29.


"The tariff announcement over the weekend, that's at ​the margins positive for the metals markets because it's better for China," said Alastair Munro, senior base metals strategist at broker Marex. Some investors believe the ruling by the U.S. ​Supreme Court that struck down President Donald Trump's emergency ⁠tariffs will benefit China, ‌highlighted by a rally in Chinese stock markets.

Munro noted ​there were signs ​that physical demand in China is also picking up, with the ⁠Yangshan copper premium , which reflects demand for copper imported ​into China, jumping 60% on Tuesday to $53 a ton.

The most-active copper ​contract on the Shanghai Futures Exchange climbed 0.8% to close daytime trading at 101,510 yuan ($14,728.88) a ton on the first day of trading after China's nine-day Lunar New Year break. Copper inventories in LME-registered warehouses rose another 1,350 tons to 243,175, data showed on Tuesday, the highest level since March 2025, having surged by 71% so far ‌this year.
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"What's going to be crucial is for us to start to see those stocks start to dissipate, maybe not this week or next ​week, but in ​the next three, four ⁠weeks," Munro said.

LME nickel climbed 4.1% to $17,995 a ton, its strongest price since February 12, as Indonesian officials considered revoking the environmental permit of PT QMB New Energy Materials, a ​nickel and cobalt joint venture led by China's GEM.

Among other metals, LME aluminium rose 0.4% to $3,101 a ton, zinc gained 0.9% to $3,383, lead added 0.5% to $1,960.50 and tin surged 5.2% to $50,200 having hit $50,510, its strongest price in nearly two weeks.

($1 = 6.8919 Chinese yuan renminbi)
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