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Copper falls from a one-week peak as inventories increase, and confusion surrounds tariffs

Prices of copper fell on Monday as inventories continued to rise. Investors were also unsure about the future of U.S. Tariffs and Chinese Trading ahead of reopening following a holiday.

Benchmark three-month Copper on the London Metal Exchange fell 0.9% to $12,843 per metric tonne by 1700 GMT. It had earlier reached a session high of more than $13,050.

LME copper is up about 3% in the last four sessions but still far below its record high of $14,57.50 on January 29, which was reached.

The fact that there is more inventory outside the U.S. may be a little dampener and indicate some softening in demand, said Nitesh Sha, commodity strategist at WisdomTree.

It's hard to tell if it's inventory moving from off-exchange warehouses (warehouses), or a general weakening in demand.

Data showed that copper stocks in LME approved warehouses increased by 6,675 tonnes to 241,825 tons, which is the highest level since March 2025. They have risen 70% this year. The dollar, equity and metals markets were all affected by the uncertainty created after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned President Donald Trump's emergency duties on Friday. Trump then announced a temporary 15% tariff on U.S. imported goods from any country and warned countries that they would be worse off if?trade agreements are scrapped.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange was also closed during the Lunar New Year holidays. Traders waited for it to reopen Tuesday.

The Chinese will be a big factor in determining whether or not there is an increase in domestic demand. Robert Montefusco, Sucden Financial, said that we'll need to wait and watch on this one.

LME nickel fell 0.3% to $17300 per ton. This was a loss of earlier gains. An official from top producer Indonesia stated that it would consider revoking an environmental permit of a particular company following a landslide at its nickel processing hub.

Other metals saw LME aluminium drop 0.4% to $3.091, zinc fall 0.9% to 3,353, lead dropped 0.6% to 1,952.50 and tin jump 2.5% to $48,735. (Reporting and editing by Hugh Lawson. Jan Harvey, Ros Russell, and Eric Onstad)

(source: Reuters)