The available stocks in warehouses registered with the London Metal Exchange saw massive inflows of China-made copper and India-made aluminium in July, which reduced the share of the Russian origin of both metals, LME data showed on Monday.
Chinese smelters delivered copper to the LME stocks in July, sources with knowledge of the matter previously told Reuters, to ease tightness in the LME system, prompted by potential U.S. import tariffs. Washington then decided to exclude copper metal from its tariffs on copper products.
The share of available copper stocks of Russian origin in the LME stocks slipped to 19% last month from 53% in June, while the amount fell to 24,825 metric tons from 31,225.
The share of China-made copper rose to 77% from 42%, while the amount jumped to 98,250 tons from 24,900, data from the LME, the world’s oldest and largest market for industrial metals, showed.