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Aluminum pulls back after a one-week low following market digests reporting Trump may ease tariffs

Aluminum prices fell to their lowest level in a week on Friday after reports that the U.S. may slash some import tariffs. However, they have since pared back losses as investors determined any impact will be minimal.

The other industrial metals have lost ground due to profit-taking and risk-off attitudes.

The benchmark three-month aluminum on the London Metal Exchange lost as much as 2,7%, but reduced its losses to just 0.9% by 1700 GMT, at $3,074 per metric ton. This is its lowest since February 6.

It reached a peak of nearly two weeks on Thursday due to supply concerns.

Ewa Manthey is a commodities strategist with ING in London. She said: "Macro driven risk-off sentiment, and widespread profit-taking continues to unwind the early-year rally."

The news that the U.S. could roll back some of its aluminum tariff regime has added an additional layer of uncertainty to trade flows and prices." The premium that U.S. metal buyers pay over the LME rate has fallen 6.8%, to 93 cents a lb.

The Financial Times reported that Trump was considering reducing tariffs. His officials believe tariffs hurt consumers. Analysts say that Trump's tariffs on steel and aluminum imports were up to 50% last June. However, the biggest impact was felt by primary aluminium. Morgan Stanley analyst Amy Gower wrote in a report that if the administration reduced tariffs on derivative products we would not see any impact on LME aluminum prices. "We'd only see downward pressure on aluminium prices if tariff reductions were also extended to primary metal."

Trading in China has slowed since the Shanghai Futures Exchange is?closed for nine days during the Lunar New Year holiday and will reopen February 24. LME copper was little altered at $12,883 per ton, after hitting a one-week low. It is moving further away its record high of $14,527.50, which it reached on January 29. This is because 'physical demand' has declined ahead of the break, and inventories have exceeded 1,000,000 metric tons on the three largest metal exchanges for the first time in over two decades. LME zinc fell 1% to $3,339 per ton. Nickel dropped 2.5% to $17,000 per ton. Lead was down 0.6% to 1,966 per ton. Tin tumbled 5%, to $47,000, a metric ton.

(source: Reuters)