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Aluminum hits a two-week low after US tariffs increase by 50%

Aluminum hits a two-week low after US tariffs increase by 50%

Aluminum prices fell on Wednesday, reaching their lowest levels in over two weeks as the United States increased the import tariff by 50% to metal-made products. However, the hope of a seasonal improvement in demand in the top consumer China helped limit losses.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange's most traded aluminium contract closed the daytime trading 0.1% lower, at 20,570 Yuan ($2,864.38) a metric ton.

In the early part of the session it reached the lowest level since 4 August at 20,430 yuan.

The benchmark three-month aluminum on the London Metal Exchange rose 0.1%, to $2,566 per ton at 0741 GMT, after having fallen to its lowest level since August 4, when it was $2,558.

The U.S. Commerce Department announced on Tuesday that it will increase steel and aluminum tariffs for more than 400 products, including wind turbines and appliances.

Analysts at Xinye Futures wrote in a report that "China's aluminium exports to the U.S. are expected to fall even further following the widened duty, but the overall impact of the tariff will be limited, as the newly added products don't contain a large amount of aluminium."

Base metals traded mostly in a narrow range before the U.S. Federal Reserve symposium this week, which could provide investors with further clues about the central bank's policy.

In a note published on Wednesday, ANZ analysts stated that a rate cut would boost metal demand and likely support economic growth.

China also kept its benchmark lending rate unchanged in August for the third month in a row, signaling that it is not in a hurry to implement monetary stimulus.

SHFE copper dropped 0.3%, Nickel fell 0.48%, Lead lost 0.51%, Zinc advanced 0.18%, and Tin added 0.5%.

LME copper rose by 0.18%. Nickel fell 0.11%. Lead slipped 0.38%. Zinc grew 0.04%.

Shanghai Metals Market, a provider of information, said that zinc prices on both exchanges rose as smelters in China planned furnace maintenance between September and October. Reporting by Amy Lv, Lewis Jackson and Harikrishnan Nair; Editing by Harikrishnan Nair. $1 = 7.1813 Chinese Yuan

(source: Reuters)