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London metals are up as Trump's tariff freeze eases the trade war fears

Base metals rose in London on Thursday as a result of a better market sentiment following the decision by U.S. president Donald Trump to temporarily suspend the recently imposed heavy duties on several nations.

As of 0434 GMT, the benchmark three-month Copper on the London Metal Exchange increased by 4.3% to $8.980 per metric tonne.

LME copper is down 12% from its peak of $10,164.50 on March 26. This was the highest level in over nine months, before trade tensions escalated.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange's (SHFE) most-traded contract for copper rose 3.2%, to 74 810 yuan per metric tonne ($10,187.80), a recovery from a low of eight months, which was hit on Wednesday.

Trump announced on Wednesday a 90-day suspension of many of his tariffs. This was a shocking reversal following a market crash that wiped trillions of dollars off global stocks.

Trump increased tariffs on China's top metals consumer from 104% to 125% after Beijing decided to increase duties on American imported goods to 84%.

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", a trader stated.

This boost, however, may only last a short time given his unpredictable attitude.

SHFE aluminium increased 1.9% at 19,810 Yuan per ton. Zinc rose 2.3% at 22,575 Yuan. Lead gained 1.6% at 16,735 Yuan. Nickel climbed by 1.2% to 120,370 Yuan. Tin fell 1.5% to 255,610 Yuan.

The LME aluminium price rose 3.7%, to $2400 per ton. Lead was up 3%, to $1896, while tin rose 6.8%, to $31,850. Zinc CMZN3 increased by 3.6%, to $2651; and nickel, at $14,630, was up 3.9%. $1 = 7.3431 Chinese Yuan Renminbi (Reporting and editing by Sherry Jackson and Sumana Nandy;

(source: Reuters)