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Market focus on Trump tariffs as copper retreats from 5-month high

The London Metals Exchange's (LME) copper prices fell from their five-month highs on Wednesday as markets awaited potential U.S. duties on copper.

As of 0214 GMT, the benchmark three-month copper price on the LME fell from its five-month-high and dropped 0.1% to $9894.5 per metric ton.

The U.S. president Donald Trump had ordered an investigation into possible new copper tariffs, which inflated the premium of Comex over the LME contract. It was at a high record of $1,192 per ton on February 2.

A trader stated that "Trump's possible tariff on Copper is what we are closely watching now. The premium of Comex over LME copper has continued to widen, and the market continues to speculate about a 25% tariff by Trump on copper."

Vladimir Potanin said that the Russian mining and metals giant Nornickel will be providing updates in the next few months on the Chinese joint venture for copper production.

Nornickel has begun discussions for a joint-venture in China. Potential investments are included in the early financial plans of 2025-2026.

LME aluminium dropped 0.2% to 2,649.5 dollars a ton. Lead fell by 0.1% to $2,000, zinc was down 0.4% at $2,952, and tin lost 0.1% to $35,190. Nickel rose 0.5% to $15,325.

SHFE copper rose 0.4%, to 80,660 Yuan per ton. SHFE aluminium fell 0.9%, to 20,640 Yuan per ton. Zinc dropped 0.4%, to 23,855 Yuan. Lead lost 0.1%, to 17,615 Yan, and Nickel lost 0.2%, to 130,520 Yan. Tin increased by 0.1% to 288,830 yuan. Reporting by Violet Li, Mei Mei Chu and Sumana Nandy; editing by SumanaNandy.

(source: Reuters)