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London copper prices rise on weaker dollar following fresh Trump tariff threats

London copper prices rose on Wednesday as a result of a weaker dollar, after U.S. president Donald Trump ordered an investigation into possible new tariffs on imports to boost U.S. copper production.

As of 0355 GMT, the price for three-month copper at the London Metal Exchange increased by 0.8% to $9472 per metric ton.

On the day, the U.S. Dollar sagged to a new 11-week low compared with its major counterparts.

The greenback price of commodities is cheaper for buyers who hold other currencies.

Trump signed an executive order at the White House to direct Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, in order to stop what his advisors see as China's move to dominate the copper market on the global scale, to launch a national-security investigation under Section 232 of 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 market was a little distorted due to news flow.

Other metals include LME aluminium, which rose by 0.1% to 2,641.5 dollars, LME Zinc, up 0.3% to $2 819 dollars, Nickel, up 0.2% at $15,370. Lead, meanwhile, gained 0.8%, to $2 008, and tin, down 0.2%, to $32,700.

SHFE aluminium rose 0.3%, to 20,605 Yuan ($2,839.09), SHFE copper fell 0.3%, to 76.880 Yuan, SHFE zinc dropped 0.6%, to 23,550 Yuan, Nickel slipped 0.5%, to 124.160 Yuan, Lead gained 0.03%, to 17,135 Yoan, and Tin eased by 0.5%, to 262,060 Yan.

(source: Reuters)