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Copper prices rise after Trump extends Iran ceasefire

The price of copper rose on Wednesday, as President Donald Trump extended a ceasefire agreement with Iran. However, lingering uncertainty over the Middle East conflict limited gains.

In official open-outcry trade, the benchmark?three-month?copper price on London Metal Exchange rose 0.3% to $13,270 per metric tonne.

This month, the renewed premium in Comex copper over the LME benchmark has been a key feature of the copper markets for 2025. It encourages shipments to the United States.

More copper is expected to flow into the United States. While the premium price persists until the end of July, a decision will be expected to be made on whether or not to impose tariffs. Kostas bintas is the global head for metals at the trade house Mercuria.

Comex copper stocks Since mid-April, the number of metric tons has increased by 2%, to 544,887, which is close to February's record 545,867. After recent stockouts from LME registered warehouses in Asia, inventories on the LME system were 395,575 tonnes.

Market participants at the Financial Times Commodities Global Summit held in Lausanne in Switzerland were bullish about copper over the long-term but warned of the risks to demand in the event of a prolonged conflict.

According to Mercuria's top metals analyst, the global aluminum market is already experiencing "black swans" in supply due to disruptions caused by?the conflict. This is expected to lead to major shortages for this year.

LME aluminium increased by 1.3% to $3,604.5 per ton. On April 16, the contract reached a record high of $3,672.

Nickel rose by 0.8% to $18,370. This was supported by a forecast from an industry group that a global deficit is expected this year.

Zinc rose 0.7% on the LME to $3.467. Lead fell 0.6% at $1.951 while tin increased 0.5% at $50.175. (Reporting and editing by Sonia Cheema, Diti Pjara).

(source: Reuters)