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London copper prices rise as Trump raises new tariff concerns

London copper rose slightly on Wednesday but gains were held in check due to caution after U.S. president Donald Trump ordered an investigation into possible new tariffs on imports of copper, aimed at increasing U.S. manufacturing.

As of 0842 GMT, the price for three-month copper at the London Metal Exchange had increased by 1.4% to $9,533 per metric tonne.

The dollar recovered from an 11-week-low compared to major peers. This was helped by a recovery in short-term Treasury rates, despite a series of weak economic reports that weighed on investor confidence.

Trump signed a White House order directing Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, to launch a national-security probe under Section 223 of the 1962 Trade Expansion Act.

Trump used the same law in his first term, to impose global tariffs of 25% on steel and aluminum.

Soni Kumari is a commodity analyst at ANZ. She said that the investigations would disrupt copper flows and cause uncertainty.

Other metals saw a 0.8% rise in LME Aluminium to $2659.5. LME Zinc rose by 0.7% to $2831, Nickel climbed 0.7% up to $15435, Lead gained 1.1% at $2015, and Tin was up by 0.9% to $33,070.

SHFE aluminium rose 0.3% to 20,615 Yuan ($2,839.88). SHFE copper fell 0.06%, to 77.020 Yuan. Zinc dropped 0.5%, to 23,565 Yuan. Nickel slid by 0.5%, to 124.130 yuan. Lead gained 0.06%, to 17,140 Yuan. Tin eased 0.6%, to 261,770 Yan.

(source: Reuters)