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The share of Chinese-made copper increases in LME stock due to higher exports

Data from the London Metal Exchange showed that, in November, the share of copper made in China among all available stocks increased. A favorable price arbitrage encouraged Chinese exports.

The percentage of copper stock that is available or on a warrant The data revealed that the percentage of - of Chinese Origin in LME Warehouses had increased to 85% by the end of the last month from 82% at the beginning of October. A LME warrant is an ownership document.

The absolute amount of Chinese copper stocks on the LME rose to 130,225 tonnes at the end last month from 100,400 tonnes in October, as the higher LME prices than domestic prices in China made it more lucrative to ship metal abroad.

The U.S. Comex Exchange, which holds over 60% of global copper inventories, does not accept Chinese copper brands. However, the metal may still be stored at U.S. storage facilities outside the Comex network.

China-made Nickel accounted for 70% available LME nickel stock, a flat rate compared to the previous month.

The percentage of aluminium stock available The data shows that the percentage of aluminium with a Russian origin at LME warehouses rose to 53% from 51% last month, and the percentage of Indian origin aluminium remained constant at 40%.

The amount of Russian metal decreased by a mere?850 to 256.875 tons but the percentage share increased as aluminium from Bahrain Oman Qatar and Indonesia was exported. Indian aluminium stock increased by 12,175 tons, to 214,525 tonnes.

LME has prohibited metal produced in Russia after April 13, 2024 from its warehouse system. This is to comply with U.S., and British sanctions over Russia's invasion of Ukraine 2022. Metal produced before April 13, 2024 can still be traded but many traders are avoiding it. (Reporting and editing by Alison Williams; Tom Daly)

(source: Reuters)