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China metals fall after trade war retaliation, copper hits over 3-month low

The price of base metals in China plunged sharply on the first day of this week as fears about a possible recession grew due to an escalating trade war. Copper prices fell to a three-month low.

As of 0138 GMT on the Shanghai Futures Exchange, the most traded copper contract dropped 7%, to 73640 yuan a metric ton, its lowest level since January 3, over three months ago. The London Metal Exchange's benchmark copper for three months fell 1.9% to $8614.5 per metric tonne.

China, the world's largest consumer of metals, retaliated on Friday by imposing additional tariffs of 34% on all U.S. products from April 10 after U.S. President Donald Trump imposed 34% on most Chinese items as part his sweeping tariff program.

We expected a steep drop in China commodity prices today, as China's markets were closed on Friday. This coincided with a significant decline in LME base-metals. Base metals traders said that some even reached their lowest limits immediately after trading started.

A second trader stated, "The retaliatory trade tariffs make us worried about a trade war that will hinder economic growth worldwide."

SHFE aluminium fell 4.5% to 19.515 yuan per ton. Zinc fell 4.2% to 22195 yuan. Lead fell 2.4% at 16,810, nickel fell 6.7% to 120370 yuan. Tin fell 6.5% at 273,680.

Other metals include LME aluminium, which fell by 0.3%, to $2.372.5 per ton. Lead also dropped 0.3%, to $1.901, while zinc slid by 0.8%, to $2.639; tin, down 2.2%, at $34,615, and nickel, down 0.1%, at $14.775 per ton.

(source: Reuters)