Tuesday, November 4, 2025
Tuesday, November 4, 2025

Copper slips

BANGALORE- Copper prices edged lower on Tuesday as the US dollar regained footing ahead of Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell’s speech this week, while elevated inventories also kept prices of the metal under pressure.

Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange was down 0.3 percent   at $7,951 per metric ton by 0245 GMT, while the most-traded November copper contract on the Shanghai Futures Exchange also dipped 0.3 percent   to 66,100 yuan ($9,039.44) per ton.

The dollar was up 0.1 percent   as markets awaited Powell’s speech on Thursday to weigh the US central bank’s upcoming policy moves.

A stronger dollar makes commodities priced in the US currency more expensive for overseas buyers.

Goldman Sachs said on Monday it expects industrial metals markets to remain vulnerable to incremental softness in the near term due to deteriorating demand and the impact from higher interest rates.

The copper market could face near-term pressure from the likelihood that Chinese imports of the metal could be restrained, the bank said in a note.

China’s trade data on Friday showed September imports of copper, used widely in the construction, transport and power sectors, fell 5.8 percent   year-on-year.

However, copper stocks on the LME held near their highest levels since October 2021, while those in SHFE warehouses recorded weekly gains last week.

In other metals, LME aluminum was down 0.2 percent   at $2,176.50 a metric ton, tin fell 0.2 percent   to $25,155, zinc dropped 1.4 percent   to $2,410.50, lead gained 0.8 percent   to $2,089, and nickel eased 0.2 percent   to $18,525.

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