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Australian mining stocks fall as Trump tariffs on China unstabilise markets

Australian mining stocks fell on Monday, after U.S. president Donald Trump imposed tariffs on China. China is the top trading partner of Australia, and the move has strained commodity prices, raising concerns about the outlook for demand from domestic miners.

The mining index closed 1.9% lower. This is the largest decline since December 19. The benchmark S&P/ASX 200 Index was down 1.8%.

BHP Group, Rio Tinto and other top miners fell by 1.8% and 2.0% respectively.

Trump imposed additional tariffs of 25% on most imports from Mexico, Canada and China, and 10% on the rest. The tariffs will be implemented on Tuesday.

Iron ore prices, which are a vital ingredient in steel production, were under pressure last year because of the weakness in China's real estate sector. However, government stimulus measures provided some relief.

The moves were primarily influenced by the overnight U.S. Tariff updates, which put a lot pressure on the base metal prices in Asia Pacific, particularly copper.

Copper, the most common base metal in London, fell to its lowest level in four weeks on Monday.

Tariffs imposed by the United States on China will likely exacerbate China's economic problems and may further reduce iron ore demand.

China is the largest buyer of Australia's biggest export, iron ore.

Grady Wulff is a market analyst for Bell Direct. He said that if China moves manufacturing overseas to avoid tariffs it will impact demand and change the supply chain.

Kim, from Saxo Markets, said that the mining firm Fortescue was particularly affected because "almost 88% of their revenue comes from China". Stocks fell by 4.4% on Monday.

Australia's mining indice fell more than 18% by 2024, compared with a 7.5% increase in the benchmark.

(source: Reuters)