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The most-traded April copper contract on the SHFE fell to 52,375 yuan ($8,280) per tonne as of 10.13am Shanghai time, down by 210 yuan from the previous day’s close.
A significant recovery in the dollar over the past few days has continued to curb investors’ appetite for the base metals in general.
The dollar index reached a high of 90.75 earlier in the day – its highest since January 18. The recent low being 88.24 on February 16, which was the lowest point since late 2014.
“The base metals complex has retreated on the back of a stronger dollar index after US Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell maintained his hawkish rhetoric during his testimony on Tuesday to Congress,” Metal Bulletin analyst Andy Farida said.
“Furthermore, the stronger-than-expected CB consumer confidence data for February supported the dollar index to erode psychological resistance at 90.00,” he added.
Meanwhile, rising copper stock levels at SHFE warehouses have further compounded the gloomy sentiment surrounding the red metal.
SHFE copper stocks totaled 218,532 tonnes on February 23, up by 20,773 tonnes from the 197,759 tonnes recorded on February 14 – the last trading day before Chinese New Year holiday (February 15-21).
“Approaching March, downstream consumption is expected to improve and ease the stock pressure. However, there are concerns that the market will remain volatile as a result of the sharp decline in US equities and rebound in the dollar,” Citic Futures Research said. Base metals prices under pressure; aluminium, zinc most resilient
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