LONDON, March 8 (Reuters) - Copper prices gained on Monday, breaching $9,000 a tonne, after the U.S. Senate approved a $1.9 trillion economic stimulus package and top consumer China boosted imports of the metal while its exports hit records.
China, which accounts for about half of all metals demand, imported 4.7% more copper in January-February despite a recent spike in prices while exports grew at a record pace.
Benchmark three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange (LME) rose 1.3% to $9,013 a tonne by 1705 GMT. The price is within striking distance of a near 10-year high of $9,617 a tonne touched last month.
"The import data shows that China is still seeing strong demand. We are in a bull market and I don't think there's anything to stop copper going higher," said independent analyst Robin Bhar.
Analysts at Citi ramped up their bullish bets on Monday, saying copper should reach $10,500 a tonne within three months as the gap between end-use consumption and mine supply reaches a record high.
STIMULUS: The U.S. Senate passed the relief plan on Saturday, a major milestone for the bill expected to boost the recovery in the world's biggest economy. Copper is often used as a gauge of global economic health.
TREATMENT: Spot treatment charges for copper concentrate in
China
Platts quoted the treatment charges at $32 a tonne.
PREMIUM: The premium of cash copper over the three-month
contract
INVENTORIES: The high premium helped attract metal into
LME-registered warehouses, with on-warrant stocks of copper
jumping 27% to 65,925 tonnes in the last week.
DOLLAR: A firmer dollar capped gains in the industrial metals after a spike in U.S. bond yields triggered risk-off sentiment.
OTHER METALS: LME aluminium fell 0.2% to $2,171 a tonne, zinc shed 0.5% to $2,787, lead fell 0.8% to $1,987, tin shed 0.9% to $24,220, nickel lost 0.9% to $16,385. (Reporting by Zandi Shabalala, Additional reporting by Mai Nguyen and Tom Daly; editing by David Evans and Louise Heavens)