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METALS-Falling inventories and weaker dollar lift copper
Cancelled warrants - metal earmarked for delivery - are at 46% of total inventories, suggesting that more metal is due to leave LME warehouses over the coming days. With one firm holding large amounts of warrants, this has fuelled concern about availability on the LME market and created a premium for the cash contract over three-month copper . DOLLAR: A weaker U.S. currency makes dollar-priced commodities cheaper for holders of other currencies, which could boost demand. ALUMINIUM: Stocks of aluminium in the LME system are at their lowest since late 2005 at 497,250 tonnes, while cancelled warrants stand at 60%.
Traders say much of this aluminium will be heading for Europe, where record high power prices have led to production cuts and shortages.
Benchmark aluminium was up 0.4% at $2,958 a tonne, having earlier touched its highest since May 5 at $2,998. LEAD: Stocks at 38,850 tonnes, the lowest since 2007, have boosted lead. It was last up 1.1% at $2,185 a tonne, retreating from an earlier two-week high of $2,195. OTHER METALS: Zinc gained 2.1% to $3,786 a tonne, tin was down 0.2% at $34,595 and nickel ceded 1% to $27,700. (Reporting by Pratima Desai Editing by David Goodman )
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