Latest News

London copper prices rise on a soft dollar but tariff worries cap gains

London copper prices rise on a soft dollar but tariff worries cap gains

The copper price in London rose on Thursday due to a weaker dollar. However, gains were modest because of the uncertainty that remains over economic growth as a result of high U.S. Tariffs.

As of 0224 GMT, the benchmark copper price on London Metal Exchange was up by 0.1% to $9,546 per metric tonne.

Dollar fell against a wide range of currencies Wednesday due to concerns about the Trump administration's plans for tax cuts and spending. The dollar's weakness makes commodities priced in greenbacks less expensive for buyers of other currencies.

Last week the U.S. agreed with China to reduce tit for tat tariffs, and implement a 90 day pause in actions. However, there is still some uncertainty about what will happen after this temporary truce.

BigMint, a consultancy, said that the copper market is facing a split path due to the impending 25% U.S. import tariff. This will create stark regional imbalances.

Global prices (LME $9,500/ton), however, are caught in a bind between the tightening of supplies and rising U.S. stocks.

Other London metals included aluminium, which was up 0.5% to $2484 per ton. Zinc was down 0.1% at $2690. Lead was down 0.4% at $1965.5. Nickel was off 0.08%, to $15 590. Tin fell 0.5% to $22,700.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange's (SHFE) most-traded contract for copper fell 0.2%, to 77960 yuan per ton ($10,830.03).

SHFE aluminium rose 0.3% to 20,230 yuan per ton. Zinc fell 0.6% to 22,450, lead dropped 0.7% to 16,765 and nickel dipped 0.01% to 123350 yuan. Tin declined 0.8% to 265050 yuan.

(source: Reuters)