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Tin was the laggard, however, with its prices weakening slightly.
The June copper contract price on the SHFE stood at 51,880 yuan ($8,239) per tonne as of 10.12 am Shanghai time, up by 0.9% or 480 yuan from last Friday’s close.
“Copper has been supported by the seasonal pick-up in demand typically seen in China during the second quarter of the year. In addition, the tightened supply of raw materials amid China’s ban on copper scrap imports since the start of the year has also been supportive,” a Shanghai-based analyst said.
Meanwhile, China’s demand for refined copper should remain supported by the government’s restriction on copper scrap imports. China’s customs show that imports of unwrought copper rose 7.3% on an annual basis in the first of quarter 2018, in contrast with a drop of 20% year on year in the first quarter of 2017.
Declining exchange inventories are also providing support for the red metal.
Deliverable copper stocks at SHFE-approved warehouses fell by 6.8% or 19,093 tonnes week on week as of last Friday to 261,743 tonnes. Stocks are now down 44,468 tonnes or 15% so far in April.
London Metal Exchange stocks – at 353,375 tonnes as of April 19 – are down approximately 30,000 tonnes or 8% so far in April.
Base metals prices
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