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Metals fall as metals are cautious over the US-China truce on tariffs

Metals fall as metals are cautious over the US-China truce on tariffs

The price of most base metals fell in London on Thursday as the U.S. - China tariff truce sparked uncertainty about various trade deals.

The benchmark copper price on the London Metal Exchange fell by 0.6% at 0146 GMT to $9,533 per metric ton.

The Commerce Ministry said that China has halted non-tariff actions taken against 17 U.S. entities on its list of unreliable entities and 28 U.S. companies on its Export Control List.

Both countries agreed to lower the tit for tat tariffs, and to implement a 90 day pause in action. Washington also said that it would reduce the "de minimis tariff" on low-value shipments coming from China to 30 percent.

A trader stated that "the trade tariff conflict has moved in a positive way, easing concerns about a possible global recession."

The 90-day ceasefire is a temporary measure. However, the trade negotiations will continue for a long time. We cannot predict with certainty that everything will be back to normal.

Other London metals saw aluminium fall 0.4% to 2,518 per ton. Zinc fell 0.3% to 2,755, Lead dropped 0.7% to 1,983 and Nickel slipped 0.6% to 15,775. Tin was unchanged at $32,825.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange saw most metals rise on the back of a growth in demand indicators. China's total social finance, which is a key indicator for future industrial metals, rose 8.7% in April to a record high. This was due to increased government bond issuance.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange's (SHFE) most traded copper contract fell by 0.3%, to 78.290 yuan per ton ($10,851.76).

SHFE aluminium increased 0.6% to 20,280 Chinese yuan per ton. Zinc gained 0.8% to 22710 yuan. Lead added 0.4% at 16,995 Yuan. Nickel price rose 0.7% to 125,210 Yuan. Tin advanced 0.4% to 265,680 Yuan. $1 = 7.2145 Chinese Yuan Renminbi (Reporting and editing by Sumana Niandy).

(source: Reuters)