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The stronger dollar has put pressure on industrial metals

The industrial metals market was subdued Wednesday due to a stronger dollar. However, the improved risk appetite on financial markets after President Donald Trump’s latest tariff relief offered some support.

The London Metal Exchange reported that the price of three-month copper was $9,585 per ton at 0704 GMT. This is a 0.1% decline.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange's (SHFE) most-traded contract for copper fell 0.1% to 78.200 yuan per ton ($10,868.36).

Dollar-denominated investments are now more expensive for holders of currencies other than the dollar.

In its latest monthly bulletin, the International Copper Study Group reported that the global refined copper market had a surplus of 17,000 metric tonnes in March, compared to a surplus of 180,000 metric tonnes in February.

The risk sentiment on the financial markets was boosted after Trump, on Sunday, reversed his threat to impose tariffs of 50% on EU imports next month. He also restored a deadline for July 9 to allow time for negotiations.

Copper prices have traded in line with the overall sentiment on the global stock exchange in the past two weeks. The US stock market has been lifted by trade optimism, and this has had a ripple effect on copper prices, said Kelvin Woong, senior market analyst for Asia Pacific, OANDA.

Data released on Tuesday showed that U.S. consumer sentiment improved in May, despite the truce between Washington and Beijing in the trade dispute.

Other London metals include aluminium, which fell by 0.3% to 2,478 dollars a ton. Zinc also declined, falling 0.7% to 2,688, while lead decreased 0.4% to 1,977, and nickel dropped 1.6% to 15,165. Tin fell 2.3% to $30,840.

The SHFE aluminium price rose by 0.2%, to 20,095 Chinese yuan per ton. Nickel fell 2.1%, to 119.800 yuan. Zinc dropped 0.9%, to 22,210 yuan. Tin declined 3.1%, to 256.870 yuan. $1 = 7.1952 Chinese Yuan Renminbi (Reporting and editing by Janane Venturaman and Sherry Phillips in Bengaluru)

(source: Reuters)