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The price of copper, used in plumbing materials and wires, has gained five percent so far this year amid speculation that Chinese imports would pick up on seasonal demand. The country drew on its stockpiles after prices rose to a record 8,800 U.S. dollars a ton on May 11, and last year's imports slumped by almost a third.
"Chinese demand for imports is showing no sign of flagging," said Li Ling, a trader at Star Futures Co. inShanghai. "As it's entering a peak consumption period, some processors increased purchases."
Copper prices have rallied every year since 2002 because of falling stockpiles, strong Chinese demand and supply disruptions from major producers such as Chile.
On the London Metal Exchange, copper for delivery in three months rose 136 dollars, or 2.1 percent, to 6,745 U.S. dollars a ton, at 6:08pm Shanghai time yesterday. Copper for delivery in June rose 0.7 percent to settle at 61,000 yuan (7,895 dollars) a ton on the Shanghai Futures Exchange.
China's apparent consumption of copper was 356,763 tons in February, according to Bloomberg calculations derived by combining production and imports, minus exports and reported stockpile increases.
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