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Shanghai Copper falls as tensions between China and the US escalate

Shanghai copper fell on Monday as trade tensions between China and the United States escalated after President Donald Trump threatened to increase tariffs sharply.

In response to Beijing's recent expansion of its controls on rare earth exports, the U.S. President threatened on Friday to impose a 100% additional tariff on imports coming from China as well as new export controls for critical software.

China blamed Trump for the escalated situation on Sunday, accusing him of hypocrisy. Beijing has not taken any further countermeasures in advance of a possible meeting between Trump, the Chinese president Xi Jinping, and South Korea's President Moon Jae-in later this month, a meeting Trump had threatened to cancel.

As of 0330 GMT, the most active copper contract at Shanghai Futures Exchange dropped 2.17%, to 84.650 yuan (11,870.71) a metric ton.

The London Metal Exchange's benchmark three-month price of copper increased by 0.08%, to $10,526 per ton, at 0409 GMT. This was after the previous session saw a drop of over 3%.

Analysts at Chinese broker GF Futures say that the price of copper is rising due to the short term impact of Trump’s tariff threat. However, supply issues caused by a series mine disruptions are continuing to support its price.

After Freeport declared force majeure last month at its flagship Grasberg Mine in Indonesia, investors have been buying copper.

Aluminium fell 1.02% among SHFE base metals. Zinc dropped 0.63%. Nickel tumbled 1.87%. Tin slid 2.53 %. Lead was the only metal to gain, gaining 0.15%.

The LME metals market saw aluminium up 0.09%. Zinc was up 0.7%. Nickel fell by 0.43%. Lead dropped 0.45%. Tin fell by 1.36%. $1 = 7.1310 Chinese Yuan Renminbi (Reporting and editing by Eileng Soreng; Lewis Jackson, Dylan Duan)

(source: Reuters)