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

Data from the London Metal Exchange showed that in January, the share of China-made metal in available London Metal Exchange stock fell as metals from other Asian nations, South America, and?Africa flooded in.

Available copper inventories The?LME?is at its highest level since late February 2025, as it has become the preferred place for traders to store metals in the U.S.A. and Asia.

Data showed that the percentage of copper stocks of Chinese origin in LME's warehouses - those on warrant or available - was 70% at the end last month. This is down from 79% in December. A LME warrant is an ownership document.

The absolute amount of Chinese copper on the LME rose to 95,150 tons from 87 475 tons in December.

The Chinese share was diluted by a total of 18,400 tonnes of metal that came from Chile, Peru. India, South Korea, and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The available copper stocks in Russia were 12,600 tonnes, which is 9%.

China-made Nickel, on the other hand, made up 72% available LME nickel stock, an increase of?3 percentage points from the previous months.

The percentage of aluminium stock available In January, the percentage of aluminium of Indian origin was 3 % lower than that of Russian origin.

The amount of Russian metal fell by 2,350 tonnes to 255.075 tons while the Indian aluminium stock dropped by 19,950 to 156.725 tons.

The LME has prohibited metal produced in Russia from its warehouse system since April 13, 2020, to comply with U.S. sanctions and British sanctions over 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 Bernadette B. Baum; Additional reporting by Tom Daly)

(source: Reuters)