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Tuesday, June 26, 2012

METALS-Copper gains on US data, China restocking - Reuters

Tue Jun 26, 2012 2:28am EDT

  * Copper up on weak dlr, short-covering, U.S. housing data      * U.S.  Richmond Fed manufacturing index for June due at  1400 GMT     (Updates prices; adds quotes, details)      By Carrie Ho      SHANGHAI, June 26 (Reuters) - London copper rose for a  second session on a weaker dollar and short-covering on Tuesday,  as traders bought back their positions ahead of the upcoming  European Union Summit and took advantage of low prices following  a 2.7 percent fall last week.       Some restocking by the world's top copper buyer China on the  back of a favourable price arbitrage as well as promising U.S.  housing data also lent support to metal prices, countering bad  news in the euro zone, which saw Cyprus become the fifth member  state to seek a bailout.       Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange rose  0.5 percent to $7,372.75 a tonne by 0451 GMT.       The most-active October copper contract on the Shanghai  Futures Exchange moved up 0.4 percent to 54,270 yuan  ($8,500) a tonne by its midday close, snapping two consecutive  sessions of losses.      "The euro edged up against the dollar today, which means it  is cheaper for Europeans to buy copper today and some of them  have done so," said a LME trader.      The dollar fell against a basket of currencies on  Tuesday, making it cheaper for holders of other currencies,  including the euro, to buy commodities which are denominated in  the greenback.       "Copper prices came off quite a bit last week and some  shorts also feel that it is time to cash out," said the trader.      Shanghai copper prices were bolstered by restocking by  Chinese bargain-hunters, although they were doing so on a  hand-to-mouth basis due to sluggish demand from their downstream  customers, traders said.      "A reluctance by many Chinese copper producers to sell their  stocks at these low prices is also causing tightness in  supplies, which is supporting prices," added a Shanghai-based  trader.       All eyes are on the two-day European leaders summit to be  held in Brussels on June 28-29, but investors remained doubtful  that the meeting, held for the 20th time, would yield any  substantive measures to solve the region's protracted debt  crisis.      While there was no shortage of bad news from the euro zone,  with Cyprus seeking a lifeline for its banks and budget just  hours after Spain submitted a formal request to bail out its  banks, market sentiment was not all bearish, with the euro   and Asian shares up as much as 0.2  percent.        The prospect of improving growth in China, the world's  second-largest economy, was also key to easing worries stemming  from the financial turmoil in Europe.      A spokesman for the Chinese trade ministry said on Tuesday  that Beijing's export growth is likely to improve for the rest  of the year and the country could meet its 2012 target for 10  percent growth in trade.              SLUGGISH CHINESE BASE METALS DEMAND      Demand for all base metals in China remains flaccid, as  downstream industries reel from slowing domestic growth and a  fall in demand for Chinese exports from major economies,  especially Europe - China's top trade partner.      "Aluminium prices are weighed down by news that local  governments are supporting high-cost aluminium smelters with  subsidies to boost local GDP," said the trader.       Still, further falls may be limited since top aluminium  smelter Aluminum Corporation of China Ltd may cut supply to  boost prices, said an analyst with an international firm.        Traders noted Chinese zinc's fundamentals were also  weak, given overall stockpiles and soft demand.       The Chinese lead market was, however, seeing better  fundamentals, with supplies relatively tight after a government  crackdown on lead pollution last year resulted in more  consolidation in the industry.                                                                                Base metals prices at 0451 GMT    Metal              Last       Change   Pct Move YTD pct chg    LME Cu            7372.75     36.75     +0.50     -2.99    SHFE CU FUT OCT2    54270       240     +0.44     -2.44    LME Alum          1868.00      3.00     +0.16     -7.52    SHFE AL FUT OCT2    15370      -145     -0.93     -2.97    HG COPPER JUL2     331.90      0.30     +0.09     -3.41    LME Zinc          1809.50      4.50     +0.25     -1.92    SHFE ZN FUT OCT2    14555       -10     -0.07     -1.62    LME Nickel       16440.00     20.00     +0.12    -12.13    LME Lead          1804.00     16.00     +0.89    -11.35    SHFE PB FUT         14700       -60     -0.41     -3.86    LME Tin          18520.00     20.00     +0.11     -3.54    LME/Shanghai arb     386        Shanghai and COMEX contracts show most active months     ^ LME 3-m copper in yuan, including 17 pct VAT, minus SHFE    third month                                                                    ($1 = 6.3633 Chinese yuan)     (Reporting by Carrie Ho; Editing by Fayen Wong and Ed Davies)  

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