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Copper reaches two-week high after US tariffs strike down

The copper price rose to a two-week high on Wednesday, as growth and demand optimism dominated. This was after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that President Donald Trump could not impose sweeping'reciprocal tariffs.

At 1706 GMT, benchmark copper on the London Metal Exchange was?up 1.1% to $13,318 per metric ton after reaching $13,335 in the previous session. This is the highest level since February 11.

The U.S. Supreme Court struck down last week tariffs that Trump imposed under a law intended for use during?national emergency'.

David Wilson, BNP Paribas commodities analyst, said that the Asian markets benefitted from the Supreme Court ruling on tariffs, which replaced higher reciprocal rates with lower Section 122 tariffs, around 10%.

This shift has?driven renewed attention in industrial metals in China, particularly after the Lunar New Year holidays." The Yangshan Copper Premium SMM-CUYP -CN is a measure of China's appetite for copper imports. It highlights expectations of a stronger demand in top consumer China. The price of copper jumped from $33 per ton to $53 per ton, on February 13th, the day before Chinese holidays began.

Traders who track inventories are still cautious.

Copper stock in warehouses The 249,650 tonnes registered at the LME are their highest level since March 7, and have increased by more than 80% from January 9.

Shanghai Futures Exchange monitors warehouses Since mid-December, the copper stock has risen by 180%.

Copper stocks are traded on the LME and ShFE as well as the U.S. Comex. For the first time since more than 20 years,?combined? has surpassed a million tons.

Otherwhere, Tin

Supply concerns have pushed up the price to $54,090, its highest level in almost four weeks.

From Indonesia

The government of?is examining a plan that would ban the exports of raw materials including tin.

The last price was up 7.5% to $54,080. The LME's tin market is a volatile one, according to traders.

Other metals saw a 2.5% increase in aluminium to $3.171, a 0.2% rise in zinc to $3.388, a 1.8% increase in lead to $1.990, and 0.90% growth for nickel at $18,080. (Reporting and editing by Diti Pujara, Vijay Kishore and Pratima Dasai)

(source: Reuters)