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Metals and oil plunge in trade war as metals suffer biggest five-day drop since 2022

The oil price fell to its lowest level in four years on Wednesday, in the worst five-day loss streak in three year. Several commodities, such as base metals, also tumbled, as the trade conflict between China and the U.S. intensifies.

As global recession fears gripped the financial markets, stocks in Asia continued to fall on Wall Street. U.S. president Donald Trump appeared set to impose a whopping 104% duty on Chinese goods.

ANZ released a report that said "Crude Oil extended losses amid signs escalation of the trade war." "Copper is down nearly 10% since Trump announced the reciprocal tariffs against major trading partners."

The United States announced on Tuesday that higher tariffs will be applied to imports from China shortly after midnight. At the same time, the Trump administration was preparing to begin talks with other trading partner countries targeted by the sweeping tariffs.

The oil prices fell to their lowest level in over four years due to looming concerns about demand, fueled by the tariff war between China and the U.S., the two largest economies of the world, and an increasing supply outlook.

Ye Lin, vice-president of Rystad's oil commodity markets, said that China's aggressive retaliation has heightened fears about a global economic recession.

She said that if the trade conflict continues, China's oil demand growth could be at risk. However, stronger incentives to boost the domestic consumption can mitigate these losses.

Brent crude traded at $61.40 per barrel while West Texas Intermediate Futures was $58.16.

Since Trump announced increased tariffs against its trading partners on 2 April, oil has lost approximately one-fifth its value. This is the largest five-day decline since March 2022.

VEGOILS, IRON ORE, AND COPPER

Copper futures at the Shanghai Futures Exchange hit an eight-month low, and iron ore prices on the Dalian Commodity Exchange fell 3% as fears about a global economic recession increased.

The benchmark copper price on the London Metal Exchange dropped 1% for the fifth consecutive day, its longest five-day loss streak since March 2019.

China is the largest metal consumer in the world. China retaliated with an additional 34% on all U.S. products from April 10 last Friday, after Trump imposed 34% on most Chinese items as part of higher tariffs.

Malaysian palm-oil futures fell more than 1%, while rubber prices plummeted to their lowest level in more than an year.

Some markets, however, bucked this trend. The dollar fell after Trump's tariffs against China were implemented, causing many traders to flee into safe-haven gold.

Chicago soybeans have risen for a third day, recovering from the four-month lows they hit earlier this week. This was a result of rising Brazilian prices and a weaker dollar. (Reporting and editing by Christian Schmollinger; Additional reporting by Michele Pek)

(source: Reuters)