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LME Copper edged down, but tighter key spread was in focus

LME Copper edged down, but tighter key spread was in focus

The price of copper in London dipped on Tuesday, after U.S. president Donald Trump reiterated the import tariffs he planned to impose on Canada and Mexico. Meanwhile, the market focused on a tightening of a key spread.

By 1207 GMT, the London Metal Exchange's (LME) three-month copper was down by 0.1% to $9.483 per metric tonne.

On Monday, when asked whether Canada or Mexico had done enough in order to avoid the 25% U.S. duty, Trump said that tariffs are "on schedule and on time."

He didn't mention the March 4th deadline, but he did later refer to his desire to have "reciprocal tariffs" to equalize the duty rates of all countries and to offset their trade barriers.

The LME copper contract has gained 5% this month. This is due to a volatile premium from U.S. Comex Copper Futures, which hit a record-high of $1,000 per ton in mid-February. The premium on Tuesday was $600 per ton.

The spread between the LME Cash Contract and the Three-Month Contract Last Friday, the price was discounted by $40. The last time it was $3 higher per ton. The premium increased to $13.4 on February 14 due to short-covering.

Due to cancellations, the spread tightened after the copper stocks in the LME system decreased significantly to 170 975 tons in less than one week, the lowest level since July. They were 258,425 tonnes on February 19. <0#MCUSTX-LOC>

The CME has a large premium on its metal due to tariff concerns. This is why LME metal is being cancelled.

Munro stated that "we saw how trades were caught in front during the Feb-March squeeze and the market has been very nervous since then." It certainly appears that the copper term structure is undergoing a structural change, whether it's artificial or driven by demand.

LME aluminium fell by 0.3%, to $2.648 per ton. Zinc dropped 1.1%, to $2.819.50. Lead eased to $1.982, while tin declined 0.6%, to $33,015; and nickel shed 0.9%, to $15,290. (Reporting and editing by Janane Venkatraman; Additional reporting by NehaArora; Reporting by PolinaDevitt)

(source: Reuters)