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London copper prices rise as the dollar falls

London copper prices rise as the dollar falls

The copper price in London rose on Friday due to a weaker dollar. However, the gains were limited by the uncertainty surrounding U.S. Tariffs.

As of 0225 GMT, the benchmark copper price on London Metal Exchange (LME), was up by 0.3% to $9,527.5 per metric tonne. The week-end gain was 0.8%.

The U.S. Dollar was weak on Friday, and it is expected to record its first weekly decline in five weeks versus the Euro and the Yen. This makes commodities priced in greenbacks more attractive for buyers who use other currencies.

Investors have been forced to seek safe havens because of the weakness in the US dollar.

The U.S. has agreed to reduce tariffs on a tit-for -tat basis and implement a 90 day pause in actions. However, it is unclear what will happen after this temporary truce.

Soni Kumari, ANZ Commodity Strategy Director, said that there are still many uncertainties about what will happen following the 90-day truce.

Market will consolidate around the current range of $9,400 to $9,000 per metric ton. Once we see a slowdown in copper imports to the U.S., prices will drop a little.

Other London metals saw a 0.3% increase in aluminium at $2,464.5 per ton. Zinc rose 0.7% to 2,715, while lead was up by 0.5% at $1,980. Nickel was up by 0.3% to 15,540. Tin rose 0.4% to $32,500.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange's (SHFE) most traded copper contract was up 0.03% to 77,930 Yuan ($10,822.71) a ton.

SHFE aluminium remained unchanged at 20,195 Yuan per ton. Zinc rose 0.5% to 22,540 Yuan. Lead was up 0.2% to 16,820 Yuan. Nickel was down 0.3% at 123,130 Yuan. Tin fell 0.3% at 264,990 Yan. ($1 = 7.2006 Yuan) (Reporting and editing by Sonia Cheema).

(source: Reuters)