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NewsGENERALCopper and nickel poised to end the week higher despite selloff

Copper and nickel poised to end the week higher despite selloff

byReuters
Copper and nickel poised to end the week higher despite selloff

Copper and nickel are poised to end the week higher on Friday, supported by supply concerns, despite a recent selloff from investors booking profits after a rally.

The most-active copper contract on the Shanghai Futures Exchange closed daytime trading down 0.45% at 101,410 yuan ($14,526.16) a metric ton, ending the week up 1.60%.

The benchmark three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange, however, rebounded 1.20% to $12,873 a ton, set for a 3.24% weekly gain.

Earlier this week, the Shanghai copper set a record at 105,500 yuan a ton, while the London copper peaked at $13,386.50.

Copper's pullback since Wednesday was largely driven by profit-taking. However, prices were well-supported from mine disruptions and tight refined copper availability outside the U.S. amid tariff uncertainties.

Meanwhile, global miners explored ways to bolster their exposure to metals such as copper, which is set to benefit from global energy transition and electrification.

Glencore and Rio Tinto reopened early merger talks that could potentially create the world's largest mining company. This follows Anglo American and Teck Resources' nearly finalised merger to make a copper heavyweight.

Meanwhile, Shanghai's most-traded nickel closed down 2.67% to 139,090 yuan a ton, ending the week rising 2.36%. It touched its highest since June 2024 at 149,600 yuan a ton earlier this week.

The London benchmark nickel rebounded 1.87% to $17,475 a ton, and is set to post a 3.86% weekly gain after marking its highest since June 2024 at $18,800 a ton.

It narrowed the loss from Thursday's selloff after Indonesia's mining ministry did not provide further details on its plan to slash nickel mining quotas in 2026. The mining minister reiterated in a press briefing on Thursday that the quotas would be adjusted to meet demand by local smelters.

Among other SHFE base metals, aluminium rose 1.42%, zinc dropped 0.31%, lead declined 0.94% and tin was down 0.08%.

Elsewhere among LME metals, aluminium rose 1.20%, zinc added 0.56%, lead gained 0.67% and tin climbed 1.78%.