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London metals are mixed amid investor caution over the US-China trade truce

Investor caution continued despite a temporary pause to the U.S. China trade dispute, which has weighed heavily on the global economic and financial markets.

As of 0157 GMT, the benchmark copper price on London Metal Exchange (LME), was $9,598 per metric ton.

U.S. president Donald Trump said Tuesday that he would be willing to deal directly with Chinese president Xi Jinping in order to finalize details of a U.S. China trade agreement.

Washington announced that it would cut the "de minimis tariff" for low-value shipments coming from China down to 30%. This will further de-escalate a potential damaging trade war.

The United States announced an agreement with China to reduce their reciprocal tariffs by a significant amount and suspend actions for 90 days.

A trader stated that "the uncertainty surrounding trade tariffs continues, and while we await further updates it is important to remember that the truce period is only a transitional one, leaving the future unclear in three months."

Other London metals include aluminium, which rose by 0.7% to 2,507 per ton. Zinc gained 0.5%, to $2719; lead fell 0.3%, to 1,983; and nickel, which climbed 0.1% to $15,755. Tin lost 0.2% to $32,660.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange's (SHFE) most traded copper contract rose by nearly 1%, to 78.610 yuan per ton ($10,898.08), boosted by falling inventories and strong domestic demand.

Copper inventories The Shanghai Futures Exchange tracked 80,705 tonnes in its warehouses. A slower decline rate helped ease supply concerns.

SHFE aluminium rose 1.1%, to 20,215 Chinese yuan per ton. Zinc increased 1.3%, to 22,630 Chinese yuan. Lead fell 0.1%, to 16,935 Yuan. Nickel price rose 0.6%, to 124970 Yuan. Tin advanced 0.9%, to 265,650 Yuan. $1 = 7.2132 Chinese Yuan

(source: Reuters)