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The most-traded January copper contract on the SHFE stood at 53,450 yuan ($8,076) per tonne as of 11.30am Shanghai time, up by 550 yuan from last Friday’s close, with around 180,000 lots changing hands so far.
Open interest of the contract was at 148,152 positions as of 10:15 am Shanghai time, down from 153,326 positions at last Friday’s close.
The rebound in SHFE copper prices is weak, with limited upside strength in the near term, China’s Ruida Futures said late last Friday. The broker recommended clients sell at 52,400-53,200 yuan per tonne and buy at low levels.
Base metals prices have been broadly supported by recent Chinese purchasing managers’ index (PMI) readings, which although were below expectations for the Caixin number, showed that China’s economy remained in expansion mode, some market watchers noted.
China’s November Caixin PMI was at 50.8 versus an expected reading of 51.2. A reading above 50 indicates expansion, while below signals contraction.
On November 30, China’s official November PMI came in at 51.8, beating both the forecast of 51.4 and the previous figure of 51.6.
“While the official gauge showed another month in expansionary territory, the private sector version by Caixin dipped slightly. Even so, it remained above 50 and was enough to remove any doubt in investors’ minds about the outlook in the short term,” ANZ Research said on Monday.
Meanwhile, strike concerns remain at Southern Peru Copper Corp and Teck’s Quebrada Blanca copper mine.
Copper stocks in Shanghai bonded warehouses fell 20,000 tonnes or 4.1% month on month to 460,000-470,000 tonnes in late November, according to Metal Bulletin’s assessment.
Deliverable copper stocks at SHFE-approved warehouses, however, increased by 4,174 tonnes or 2.5% last week to 168,987 tonnes as of December 1.
Other metals higher, bar aluminium
Currency moves and data releases