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Copper prices rise on weakening dollar; US-China Trade War remains in focus

The dollar's weakness helped copper and other base metals finish the week in London, but gains were limited by the possibility of a trade war between the U.S.

The benchmark three-month copper price on the London Metal Exchange was up 2.0% at $9,166.50 per metric ton as of 1622 GMT.

Metal used in construction and power is up 4.5% after reaching a low of $8.105 per ton, a level not seen for a month on Monday. The tariff war between the two world's largest economies fueled fears about a global recession.

Beijing raised its tariffs against U.S. goods to 125%, a response to President Donald Trump's decision on Thursday to raise duties to 145%. The trade war is now at a higher level and threatens global supply chains.

Consumer buying and temporary technical aspects helped restore some stability to metals.

The spread between cash LME copper and benchmark 3-month futures The price of iron ore has been volatile in the run-up to next week's LME contract settlement. It was last trading at a $37 premium per ton, up from a $63 discount one week earlier.

The Comex contract with the highest volume rose 4.6%, to $4.537/lb. This increased the premium over LME.

Codelco, the Chilean copper giant, said that China is a major demand source.

Yangshan Copper Premium The price of copper in China, which is a reflection of the demand for imported copper, has remained at $89 per ton. This is its highest level since late 2023.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange monitored copper inventories in warehouses and they fell by 19% last week.

LME aluminium rose 1.4% to $2.402 per ton. Zinc was up 0.7% at $2.659.50. Lead was up 1.3% to $1.917. Tin climbed 2.0% to $31,175 while nickel increased by 2.1% to $14,085. (Reporting and Additional Reporting by Violet Li, David Evans & David Goodman; Kirby Donovan; David Evans & David Goodman)

(source: Reuters)