Copper prices moved through the $4,400 a tonne level for the first time on Thursday as tight supplies failed to keep pace with rising global demand, amid speculation that China would buy the metal to cover wrong way-bets in the futures market.
The record prices raise the stakes between a growing chorus of metal watchers who say the figures are not justified by fundamentals and speculators who doubt whether China has sufficient volumes of the metal to cover its trading obligations.




