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The three-month copper price has climbed above $7,000 per tonne for the first time in three years, with the red metal reaching its highest level since August 2014 at $7,111.50 per tonne.
Nickel has tracked the strong performance seen in copper and is trading $65 per tonne higher this morning as it looks set to challenge the $12,000-per-tonne level.
The three-month nickel price has been boosted recently by the ongoing curb in Chinese output and strong demand from steel producers.
Chinese market participants’ growing optimism ahead of the upcoming 13th Five-Year Plan meeting at the 19th Party Congress in Beijing has also played a major role in the higher prices of late.
“The rest of the base metals are trading up in high ground, but there does seem to be supply around that needs to be absorbed before prices can push higher. They remain well placed to extend higher and a rebound in China’s iron ore and steel prices, combined with generally good data may well be enough to keep buying pressure alive,” noted William Adams, Metal Bulletin senior analyst.
Aluminium prices climbed $15 per tonne as 10,800 tonnes were delivered out of LME-listed warehouses across various locations today. Analysts generally agree that aluminium price momentum should persist through the end of the year, thanks to global demand growth as well as Chinese capacity cuts.
Zinc prices also remain strong with cash/three-month spreads still in significant backwardation, most recently at $59 per tonne, while lead followed zinc higher – both climbing over $30 per tonne this morning.
Copper rallies
Base metals prices
Currency moves and data releases