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London aluminium lingers near eight-month high

London aluminium lingers near eight-month high

London's aluminium prices were near an eight-month high on Friday, as traders assessed their concerns about the European Union's envoys agreement to ban Russian imports of primary aluminium in the sanctions package.

As of 0638 GMT the price for three-month aluminium at the London Metal Exchange was unchanged, $2,722 per metric ton. It had earlier reached its highest level since 2024.

After reports that the European Union supported a ban on Russian Metal, aluminum led the sector to rise. "EU Ambassadors have agreed to implement a new package of sanctions" against the main supplier, said Daniel Hynes.

EU diplomats reported that EU envoys agreed Wednesday on a 16th set of sanctions against Russia. This included a ban on the import of primary aluminium, a sale of gaming consoles, and a list of 73 shadow vessels.

The U.S. president Donald Trump announced that he will announce new tariffs in the next month, or even sooner. He said he plans to add lumber and forest products, as well as previous plans on duties for imported cars, semiconductors, and pharmaceuticals.

According to our opinion, Trump's tariffs will reduce demand growth. ANZ says that aggressive import tariffs could weigh on capex growth, as business confidence would remain low.

Amid the ongoing tariff war and the concerns over a slowing demand, the focus will be on China.

LME copper dropped 0.7% to $9.499.5. Nickel fell 1.3% to $15.455. Tin fell 0.2% at $33,325. Zinc eased 0.5% at $2.904.5. Lead firmed up 0.5% to $1.996.5.

The price of SHFE aluminium increased by 0.1%, to 20,805 Chinese yuan ($2,870.09) per ton. SHFE copper dropped 0.5%, to 77,000 yuan. SHFE zinc fell 0.1%, to 23,940, and nickel fell 0.7%, to 123770, while lead rose 0.2%, to 17,080, and tin climbed 1.1%, to 263,730. $1 = 7.2489 Chinese Yuan Renminbi (Reporting and editing by Subhranshu, Rashmi, and Janane Venkatraman in Bengaluru)

(source: Reuters)