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In December, the share of copper from China in LME stock fell.

Data from the London Metal Exchange showed that the share of China-made Copper among the available London Metal Exchange stock fell in December. This was due to the outflows?of the inventory in the LME registered?warehouses?in Asia.

The percentage of copper stocks that are available - or those on warrant The data revealed that 79% of the - in LME's warehouses were of Chinese origin at the end last month. This was down from 85%?in November. A LME warrant is an ownership document.

The absolute number of Chinese copper stock on the LME dropped to 87,475 tons by the end last month, from 130,225 tonnes in November. The available copper stocks were made up of 13% Russian-made copper, or 13,850 tons.

China-made nickel accounted for 69% available LME Nickel stocks, down one percentage point compared to the previous month.

The percentage of aluminium stock available The data showed that the percentage of aluminium of Indian origin dropped by one percentage point from 39% to 38%.

Absolute terms, Russian metal stocks increased by only 550 tonnes to 257 425 tons while Indian aluminum stocks declined by 37 850 tons?to 176 675 tons.

The LME has prohibited?metal produced by Russia since April 13,2024 from its warehouse system in order to comply with?U.S. and British sanction imposed due to Russia's invasion of Ukraine 2022.

Metals made before this date are still available for trading, but most traders avoid them. (Reporting and editing by Jan Harvey; Polina Devlin)

(source: Reuters)