Latest News

After a selloff, the price of base metals in China has stabilised.

The base metal price in China stabilized on Tuesday, after the previous day’s drop, as the market took a wait-and see stance, amid an escalating trade war that has fueled recession fears.

As of 0120 GMT the most traded copper contract at the Shanghai Futures Exchange dropped 1.4%, to 73.270 yuan a metric ton, a drop of three months. The market had opened Asia Monday with a 7% drop.

The benchmark copper price for three months on the London Metal Exchange was up 0.4% at $8,768 a metric ton. This is a rebound from its Monday low of $8,105, which marked the lowest since November 2023.

China's Commerce Ministry stated on Tuesday that it would never accept "blackmail" from the United States, after President Trump threatened on Monday to impose a 50% additional tariff on China if Beijing did not remove its retaliatory duties.

China, the world's largest consumer of metals, responded last 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.

Base metals traders said that prices have stabilized after yesterday's steep decline. People are waiting and watching as the retaliatory trade tariffs continue.

SHFE aluminium rose 0.9% to 19.725 yuan per ton. Zinc gained 0.7% to 22530 yuan. Lead fell by 0.3% to 16.660 yuan. Nickel was up 0.1% at 119,400, and tin dropped 0.8% to 268630 yuan.

Other metals include LME aluminium, which rose 0.6% to $2384 per ton. Lead was up 0.4% at $1877. Zinc was up 0.4% at $2624. Tin was down by 0.1%, at $33,900, and nickel was 1.2% higher at $14,540. (Reporting and editing by Janane Vekatraman; Mei Mei Chu and Violet Li contributed to this report.)

(source: Reuters)