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Trump extends the deadline for attacking Iranian energy

Trump extends the deadline for attacking Iranian energy
Trump extends the deadline for attacking Iranian energy

Prices of copper and aluminium fell on Friday as U.S. president Donald Trump extended the deadline for striking Iran’s energy plants. Markets appeared skeptical?about the prospects?of an agreement?between the two sides.

In official open-outcry trade, the benchmark three-month price of copper at the London Metal Exchange fell by 0.3% to $12,115 per metric tonne.

Since the U.S. and Israeli war against Iran began on 28 February, copper, which is widely used for power and construction has fallen by 9%, threatening economic growth and causing inflation.

Macquarie analysts stated in a research report that "prices lack fundamental support, and are expected remain volatile. They will be dominated by macro news and investor flow."

Prices will recover quickly if the war with Iran ends, but there's a risk of a price drop due to the 1 million tons of visible stocks that have been built since 2025, and the ongoing surpluses forecast.

Data showing China's industrial profit grew 15.2% during the first two months in 2026 has helped to boost sentiment for copper and other metals that are growth-dependent.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange reported that copper inventories in warehouses were down 12.6% to 359 135?tons this week, while the Yangshan premium on copper was up by 12%. The price of copper in China, which is a measure of the appetite of the Chinese for imported copper, ended the week at 68 dollars per ton, after reaching a high of 69 dollars during the past week.

LME aluminium fell 0.9% to $3,240 per tonne in official activity. It had previously reached $3,299, its highest level since March 20.

Concerns about the near-term availability caused by exports from the?Gulf producers, which account for 9% global supply, drove the premium on cash LME aluminum contract against the three-month forward. To $59 per ton?its highest level since 2007.

(Reporting by Polina Devitt Additional reporting by Dylan Duan Editing and David Gooding) (Reporting and editing by David Goodman Additional reporting by Dylan Duan)

(source: Reuters)