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Lead was Thursday morning’s largest gainer, up $24 to $2,461 per tonne as at approximately 09.45am London time. Copper rose $32 to $6,782 per tonne, while aluminium was inched $5.50 higher to $2,058.50 per tonne.
Concerns about the growth of the Chinese economy and the tight credit situation there had been pressuring the broader base metals for most of this week. However, the reading of China’s November purchasing managers’ index (PMI) beat forecasts at 51.8.
There was also positive data out of the United States, with the country’s third-quarter gross domestic product growth coming in at 3.3%, from 3.0% previously.
Still, the positive readings did not lift the entire base metals complex.
“Base metals prices are on a back footing, most metals are holding above support levels, suggesting consolidation,” William Adams, senior research analyst at Metal Bulletin, said.
Nickel continues to decline
Currency moves and data releases