Group 1 - LME copper prices reached a two-month high, driven by speculative buying after breaking technical levels, declining inventory, and production halts at a major mine in Congo [1][3] - As of June 5, LME three-month copper closed at $9,739.50 per ton, up $118 or 1.23%, with an intraday high of $9,809.50, marking the highest level since March 31 [1][2] - LME copper inventory decreased by 3,350 tons or 2.37% to 138,000 tons, the lowest in nearly a year, with a nearly 50% decline year-to-date [4][5] Group 2 - The increase in copper prices was supported by concerns over the recent production halt at the Kakula copper mine in the Democratic Republic of Congo [6] - COMEX copper for July rose 0.89% to $4.93 per pound, with a premium of $1,129 over LME prices [4] - The U.S. has raised tariffs on steel and aluminum, which has reignited concerns over potential new tariffs on copper imports, influencing market dynamics [3]
金属涨跌互现 期铜触两个月高位,供应担忧与库存下降提供支撑【6月5日LME收盘】
Wen Hua Cai Jing·2025-06-06 00:53