
Copper hits record near $12,300 on US GDP growth, weak dollar

Copper advanced for a sixth straight session to an all-time high close to $12,300 on Wednesday as robust U.S. economic growth boosted demand prospects and a weaker dollar supported prices.
Benchmark three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange was up 1.1% to $12,195 a metric ton as of 1010 GMT, having earlier hit a record $12,282. The metal has gained 2.6% this week, is up 9% in December and on track for a 39% leap in 2025 as supply constraints lead to bullish copper bets.
On the Shanghai Futures Exchange, copper also hit an all-time peak of 96,750 yuan ($13,793) a ton on Wednesday.
"It wouldn't surprise me if the Chinese are buying physical copper in the market - bringing in as much as they can get while no one is looking," SP Angel analyst John Meyer said.
The Yangshan premium
Among other LME metals, aluminium was up 0.6% at $2,956 a ton, after hitting its highest since May 2022. Zinc nudged up 0.2% to $3,098, lead added 0.6% to $1,994.50, while tin climbed 1% to $43,005.
Nickel rose for a sixth day on expectations Indonesia will cut ore output next year, and was up 0.6% at $15,835.
The LME ring, the open-outcry trading floor, will close early, at 1440 GMT, on Wednesday, before the exchange shuts on Thursday and Friday for the Christmas holiday.



