Saturday, September 13, 2025

Copper prices climb

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SINGAPORE — Copper rose on the London Metal Exchange and Shanghai Futures Exchange on Wednesday, as traders are expected to continue rushing metal shipments to the US ahead of potential import tariffs, further tightening already low inventories elsewhere.

The most-traded copper contract on the SHFE gained 0.62 percent to 80,520 yuan ($11,238.43) per metric ton, or the highest price range so far in 2025 around the latter half of March, and the three-month copper on the LME inched up 0.12 percent to $9,945.5.

“Other than expectations of better demand from China with higher PMI in May and the US with better job market, low copper inventories at the SHFE and LME amid the continuing shipment to the US before the imposition of the import tariffs have been supportive to the price,” a Beijing-based metals analyst from a futures company said.

Copper stocks MCUSTX-TOTAL in LME-registered warehouses dropped 66 percent since the middle of February to 91,250 tons, and copper inventories CU-STX-SGH in the warehouses monitored by the SHFE also fell by 66 percent since early March to 81,550 tons as of last Friday.

Copper inventories in China typically rise in the summer months due to low seasonal demand.

“US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said that Washington’s negotiations with Beijing will focus first on reciprocal tariffs, and only later on duties on copper and other raw materials,” ANZ said. 

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