Copper up on Chinese stimulus hopes, capped by Greek worries
Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange climbed 0.7 percent to \\$5,534 a tonne by 1121 GMT, adding to gains of 2 percent on Friday. Prices moved further away from a 5-1/2 year low of \\$5,339.50 a tonne plumbed last week.
Factory growth in China shrank for the first time in more than two years last month, a private business survey showed on Monday, adding to the debate over how and whether Beijing will accelerate policy easing
"A weak Chinese PMI means there's additional pressure for stimulus measures and copper in particular will benefit," said Nic Brown, head of commodity research at Natixis in London.
"Our view in the past has been you buy copper when manufacturing PMI is at its lows and you sell it when it's at its highs."
The most-traded April copper contract on the Shanghai Futures Exchange jumped 2.8 percent to 40,290 yuan (\\$6,437) a tonne.
"It is short-covering in anticipation of further stimulus or RRR (required reserve ratio) cut," said a trader in Singapore.
A rebound in oil prices also helped support metals.
Gains for metals in Europe, however, were capped by concern over Greece, which launched a drive to persuade a sceptical Europe to accept a new debt agreement while it starts to roll back on austerity measures.
"I think sentiment in Europe through February is going to be difficult, everyone is going to be looking very closely at the Greek timetable," said Brown.
Investors also eyed data from the euro zone, which showed factory activity grew slightly last month as companies kept slashing prices, but a weakened currency did little to help drive new orders from abroad.
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