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London copper prices rise, dollar checks gain

London copper prices rise, dollar checks gain

The copper price in London rose on Tuesday as the markets priced in the increased supply of the industrial metal heading to the U.S. amid fears over possible tariffs. However, a stronger dollar tempered gains.

As of 0225 GMT, the benchmark three-month price for copper at the London Metals Exchange increased by 0.2% to $9975.5 per metric ton.

Last month, U.S. president Donald Trump ordered an investigation into possible new tariffs on imports of copper to rebuild U.S. manufacturing of a critical metal for electric vehicles, military equipment, the power grid, and many consumer products.

Benchmark Mineral Intelligence stated that "markets will be nervously monitoring any copper tariff developments in the coming weeks, as refined metal is heading for the U.S."

The quarterly China Smelters Purchase Team meeting (CSPT), which is scheduled for next Monday, will also be closely monitored, particularly in regards to the Q2 buying floor and any possible coordinated production cuts.

The U.S. Dollar hit a 3-week high on Tuesday against the Japanese yen and was strong across the board, given the positive U.S. data on services and cautious optimism regarding tariffs.

The dollar price of metals increases when purchased with other currencies.

Other metals include LME aluminium, which fell 0.02% at $2.615 per ton. Lead gained 0.5% to $2.047; zinc increased 0.3% to 2,955.5; tin rose 0.3% to 34,450, and nickel climbed by 0.4% to 16 070 per ton.

The price of SHFE copper increased by 0.9%, to 81.700 yuan (11,248.95 dollars) per ton. SHFE aluminium fell 0.1%, to 20,680 Yuan. Zinc rose 0.3%, to 24,125 Yuan. Lead dropped 0.4% to 17,505 Yuan. Nickel lost 0.3%, to 129.160 yuan. Tin dropped 0.8%, to 273,980 Yuan. ($1 = 7.2629 Chinese Yuan) (Reporting and editing by Sumana Niandy)

(source: Reuters)