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London metals increase as Trump's tariff reprieve calms fears of a trade war

The base metal price in London rose on Thursday due to a better market sentiment following the decision by U.S. president Donald Trump to temporarily lower his recent hefty tariffs on a number of countries.

As of 1300 GMT, the benchmark three-month price for copper on London Metal Exchange (LME), was up by 3.5% to $8,910 a metric tonne.

LME copper is down 12% from its peak of $10,164.50 on March 26, before the trade tensions escalated.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange's (SHFE) most-traded contract for copper rose 2.8%, to 74.540 yuan a metric ton. This is a recovery from a low of eight months on Wednesday.

Trump announced on Wednesday a 90-day suspension of many of his new trade tariffs, a shocking reversal following a global stock market crash that wiped trillions of dollars off the value of stocks.

Trump increased pressure on China, however, by threatening to increase tariffs on China's top metal consumer to 125%. This is an increase from the 104% rate that was set on Wednesday. Beijing had decided to increase additional duties to 84% on American products.

The market was caught off guard by Trump's abrupt change in tariff policy. Investors who were initially pessimistic on economic prospects found renewed confidence after the reprieve. This boost, however, may only last a short time due to his unpredictable stance," said a base metals dealer.

SHFE aluminium increased 1.9% to 19.815 yuan per ton. Zinc rose 2% to 22495 yuan. Lead gained 1.2% at 16,660 yuan. Nickel was up by 0.7% to 119,660, and tin dropped 3.0% to 251,600.

Other metals include LME aluminium, which rose 4.0% to $2.407 per ton. Lead was up 2.3% at $1.882, Tin was up 4.5% to $31,150; zinc CMZN3 was up 2.6% at $2.625, and Nickel was up 2.9% to $14,485 per ton.

(source: Reuters)