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London aluminium rangebound amid US tariff concerns

London aluminium rangebound amid US tariff concerns

London aluminium was trading in a narrow range, near its three week high on Tuesday. Investors weighed the risks of a global trade war following President Donald Trump's new tariffs on steel and aluminum imports.

As of 0330 GMT on Monday, the London Metal Exchange's (LME) three-month aluminium was unchanged at $2,657.5 per metric ton, close to the previous high of $2.662.50, set on Monday.

Trump raised import tariffs for steel and aluminum to 25%, "without exceptions or exclusions", in an effort to help struggling industries.

After a telephone call with Australia's Prime Minister Anthony Albanese he agreed that Australia could be exempted from the tariffs, noting the fact that Australia was among the few countries where the U.S. enjoyed a surplus in trade.

We expect that any tariffs will result in higher prices for U.S. Manufacturers. This would be more likely to take the form of higher U.S. Midwest Premiums than a sustained increase in the LME Price," ANZ Research stated.

The U.S. depends heavily on aluminium imports, mainly from Canada. The U.S. prices of primary aluminum are based on LME benchmark plus Midwest premium. This premium has increased in recent months, and is now at $0.305 per lb.

ANZ Research also added that the tariffs would change trade patterns as more Canadian aluminum will be shipped to Europe, and the U.S. will increase purchases from the Middle East.

LME benchmark copper dropped 0.4% to $9.409, zinc fell 0.1% to $2.843, tin slipped 0.5% to $31,000 and lead fell 0.3% to $1.994 while nickel fell 0.5% to $15,440.

The aluminum contract at the Shanghai Futures Exchange rose by 1.0%, to 20,700 Yuan ($2,832.74) per ton. This is the highest level since December 2024.

The SHFE copper fell 0.3%, to 77.200 yuan. Nickel dropped 1.7%, to 124.820 yuan. Zinc lost 0.5%, to 23,740, yuan. Lead shed 0.1%, to 17,155, yuan. Tin dropped 0.8%, to 257.250, yuan. $1 = 7.3074 Chinese yuan renminbi (Reporting and editing by Varun H K, Sumana Nandy and Polina Devtt)

(source: Reuters)