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The price of copper drops from $10,000 to $9,000 on the back of a stronger dollar and uncertainty about tariffs

The copper price fell on Thursday. It climbed above $10,000 per metric ton, but then retreated under the pressure of a stronger dollar and lingering uncertainty about how tariffs would affect demand.

After touching $10,015, the price of three-month copper at the London Metal Exchange dropped 0.3% to $9.983 per ton during official open-outcry trades. This was the second consecutive session that it moved above $10,000.

Nitesh Sha, a commodities strategist at WisdomTree, said: "I believe the news on copper markets is still quite positive, but the dollar has firmed up a little this morning and added some headwinds to prices."

Dollar index remained steady as traders awaited important U.S. consumer prices data to get a hint on Federal Reserve's interest rate-cutting path.

The strong dollar increases the cost of commodities in other currencies for those who use it.

Shah continued, "Miners have experienced more disruptions in their production than expected. This is combined with the fact capex for copper mines just aren't enough to keep pace with metal demand growth."

After an underground incident, Grasberg, one of the largest copper mines in the world, temporarily halted its mining operations this week.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange's most traded copper contract gained 0.6%, to 80,130 Yuan ($11251.37) per ton.

Since March, when it reached its highest level in over eight months at $10,0164.50, copper has struggled to break through $10,000 several times.

Shah said that many investors were waiting to see whether U.S. Tariffs would dampen the demand as expected.

He said that the situation was more complex and that the overall effect could be that the metal demand is not really affected by all the other stimuli.

Other metals include LME aluminium, which rose by 0.9% to $2.649.50 per ton, and tin, which gained 0.1%, to $34,650. Zinc fell 0.3%, to $2.879, while lead dropped 0.1%, to $1.985, and nickel, down 0.5%, to $15,065.

Click here to see the top metals stories ($1 = 7.1218 Chinese Yuan) (Reporting and editing by David Goodman).

(source: Reuters)