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London copper little changed, US tariff concerns persist

London copper prices were largely unchanged Wednesday due to uncertainty surrounding U.S. duties on the metal.

The London Metal Exchange's three-month copper fell by $2.5 per ton, to $9.631.5 at 0701 GMT. The Shanghai Futures Exchange's most traded copper contract rose 0.5% to $10,879.85 per ton.

The U.S. doubled the tariffs on imports of steel and aluminum to 50% starting Wednesday for all trading partners, except Britain. Britain's steel and aluminum exports are taxed at a 25% rate until July 9.

Copper found some support amid concerns that the metal could also be subjected to U.S. Tariffs. The Trump administration is currently evaluating the impact of U.S. imports of copper on the local industry," ANZ stated.

Investors waited for U.S. jobs data to provide immediate trading signals and a possible development on tariff negotiations.

After the delivery of 4,600 tonnes, inventories dropped to 143.850 tons. This is the lowest level in nearly a year.

Other LME metals saw tin gain 1.1% at $31,720; aluminium 0.8% at $2,483.5 per ton; zinc 0.5% at $2,721, and nickel 0.5% up to 15,515. Lead also gained 0.2%, to $1,989.

SHFE tin rose 3.1% to 257,000 yuan. Aluminium gained 0.7% at 20,075 yuan per ton. Lead increased by 0.6% to 16670 yuan. Zinc grew 0.8% to 22420 yuan. Nickel was up 0.9% at 122,590.

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(source: Reuters)