
Copper stabilises on firmer demand, talk of Iran ceasefire

Copper prices bounced on Wednesday after reports the U.S. was seeking a ceasefire in the Iran war and due to firmer Chinese demand, but the market was wary after Tehran denied there were any negotiations. Benchmark three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange climbed 1.3% to $12,257 per metric ton by 1030 GMT, having slipped by 0.6% in the previous session.
Israel and Iran exchanged airstrikes on Wednesday as Iran's military rejected President Donald Trump's assertion the U.S. was in negotiations to end the war. The most-traded copper contract on the Shanghai Futures Exchange snapped a two-session losing streak to end daytime trade up 1.1% at 95,590 yuan ($13,864.67) per ton. Signs of improved physical demand in top metals consumer China also supported prices. Firmer demand was highlighted in inventory data, showing stocks in SHFE-registered warehouses fell by 5.2% last week, the first time this year. The Yangshan copper premium, a gauge of China's appetite for importing copper, surged by 33% to $69 a ton on Wednesday, the strongest since June last year. Aluminium was the only LME metal in negative territory, easing 0.7% to $3,236.50 a ton. The lightweight metal used in transport, packaging and construction had rallied after the start of the war over supply worries since the Gulf is a major producer, but an potential end of the war could ease those concerns. Among other metals, LME zinc added 0.2% to $3,046.50 a ton, nickel advanced 3.1% to $17,475, lead gained 0.8% to $1,907.50 and tin rose 1% to $44,675.


