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LME Copper eases Trump's tariffs on autos and semiconductors

LME Copper eases Trump's tariffs on autos and semiconductors

London copper prices eased Wednesday, as concerns about metal demand were raised by President Donald Trump’s threat to impose a 25% tariff on semiconductor chips and automobiles.

The price of three-month copper at the London Metal Exchange decreased by 0.6%, to $9.418 per metric ton as of 0423 GMT.

Trump announced on Tuesday that he plans to impose auto import tariffs "in and around 25%" as well as similar duties on semiconductors. This is the latest of a series measures that threaten to disrupt international trade.

He also said that sectoral tariffs for pharmaceuticals and semiconductors would start at "25%" or more, rising significantly over a period of one year.

"Trump has actually considered implementing additional tariffs on automobiles... This could result in a slowdown of global growth and disruptions in the global supply chain. According to Kelvin Wong of OANDA, senior analyst for Asia Pacific, such disruptions may cause copper prices to fall in the future.

Citi said Trump was more motivated to impose copper tariffs in his second term due to the metal's increasing importance for key emerging global competitive sectors like energy transformation and artificial intelligence.

Trump's administration announced on Tuesday that it would hold further talks with Russia to end the war in Ukraine, after an initial meeting which excluded Kyiv. This is a departure from Washington’s previous approach, which rallied U.S. Allies to isolate Russian president Vladimir Putin.

LME aluminium fell by 0.4% to $2.657 per ton. Zinc was unchanged at $2.884 while nickel dropped 0.3% to $15.310. Tin was down by 0.5% to 32,630, and lead was down 0.7% to 1,983.

SHFE aluminium increased 0.2% at 20,665 Yuan ($2,837.39) per ton. SHFE copper rose 0.2% at 76,920 Yuan. Nickel fell 0.2% at 123,720 Yuan. Zinc eased by 0.1% to 23,875 yuan. Lead fell 1.2% to 16960 yuan. Tin lost 0.6%, 260,880. $1 = 7.2831 Chinese Yuan

(source: Reuters)