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London metals are mixed after Trump's tariff pause

Base metals traded in London mixed on Friday, and headed to a weekly increase after U.S. president Donald Trump decided temporarily to lower the heavy duties for dozens countries and the dollar fell.

As of 1300 GMT, the benchmark three-month Copper on the London Metal Exchange (LME), was unchanged at $8.985 per metric tonne. This week, it has gained 2.3%.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange's (SHFE) most traded copper contract rose 0.9%, to 74,560 Yuan per metric tonne. The contract has fallen 5.8% since Thursday's closing price of 79.190 yuan a metric ton. SHFE was closed for a holiday on April 4.

Dollar fell as investors fled U.S. assets in favor of safer havens due to waning confidence.

The greenback price of commodities is cheaper when purchased in other currencies.

Trump announced on Wednesday a 90-day suspension of tariffs on most countries, a dramatic U-turn following a market crash that wiped trillions of dollars off global stocks.

The U.S. President increased duties on Chinese imports on Thursday to a rate of 145%, further intensifying a high-stakes conflict between the two world's largest economies.

"Market uncertainty continues, driven primarily by the unpredictable nature trade policies and tariffs. Investors remain cautious due to ongoing concerns over the possibility of a recession as a result of the ongoing trade tensions," said a base metals dealer.

SHFE aluminium increased 0.5% to 19.705 yuan per ton. Zinc rose 0.8% to 22.560 yuan. Lead gained 0.6% at 16.740 yuan. Nickel was up by 1.1% to 120.350 yuan. Tin advanced 1.7% to 252.350 yuan.

LME aluminium fell by 0.1%, to $2.368 per ton. Lead rose 0.1%, to $1.893.5. Tin was up 0.1%, at $30,685. Zinc CMZN3 dropped 0.3%, to $2.632, and nickel lost 0.4%, to $14,740. (Reporting and editing by Violet Li, Lewis Jackson)

(source: Reuters)