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London metals drop as the dollar strengthens and Middle East tensions increase

London metals drop as the dollar strengthens and Middle East tensions increase

The prices of metals fell in London on Tuesday due to a stronger U.S. Dollar and the escalating tensions with Israel and Iran.

As of 0246 GMT, the London Metal Exchange reported that three-month copper was down by 0.3%, at $9,677 a metric ton.

LME aluminium fell by 0.2%, to $2 508 per ton. Zinc dropped 0.4%, to $2 646, while lead dropped 0.5%, to $1 996.50, and nickel fell 0.4%, to $15 005. Tin fell 0.3% to $32,505.

Metals prices fell this morning as a result of the conflict between Israel and Iran, according to a Singapore-based metals dealer.

Israel and Iran both attacked each other on Tuesday for the fifth day in a row. U.S. president Donald Trump also urged Iranians, citing their rejection of an agreement to reduce nuclear weapons development, to leave Tehran.

U.S. Stock Futures fell and Oil Prices climbed.

The dollar index increased by 0.3% against its competitors. The dollar's strength makes commodities priced in greenbacks more expensive for buyers of other currencies.

Better-than-expected retail data from China released on Monday offered some relief and raised hopes for a rise in metals demand.

As part of an agreement announced by the United States and the United Kingdom on Monday during the G7 Summit, the U.S. will impose a tariff-free quota for steel and aluminum imported from the United Kingdom.

The SHFE's most-traded contract for copper gained 0.2%, to 78470 yuan per metric tonne ($10,926.84).

SHFE aluminium was unchanged at 20,405 Yuan per ton. Lead was also flat at 16,910 Yuan. Nickel fell by 0.9%, to 118640 Yuan. Zinc gained 0.1%, at 21,820, and tin dropped 0.4%, to 263,400.

Click or to see the top news stories on metals, and other topics. ($1 = 7.1814 Chinese Yuan Renminbi). (Reporting and editing by Harikrishnan Nair in Bengaluru and Sherry Jacobi-Phillips.

(source: Reuters)