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Copper up on the temporary US-China Trade truce

The price of copper rose on Tuesday, after the United States announced it would reduce some tariffs for imports from China. China's inventories had dropped dramatically, but gains were limited by caution on the market.

As of 0940 GMT, the benchmark copper price on London Metal Exchange had increased by 0.3% to $9,544 per metric tonne.

The United States announced on Monday that it would cut the "de minimis tariff" on low-value products imported from China. This will further de-escalate a trade conflict between the two world's largest economies.

The order follows the announcement by Beijing and Washington of a temporary truce after weekend talks. Both sides agreed to remove most of the tariffs placed on each other's products since early April. Ewa Mnthey, commodities analyst at ING, said that despite the optimism there are still reasons to be cautious. The U.S. China talks are just getting started.

Manthey said that tariffs are still significant and could affect raw material consumption. A continued dollar rally may also be a barrier to metal prices.

The dollar has maintained its gains and is still near the highs of one month. The dollar's strength makes metals more expensive for holders of other currencies.

Citi stated in a report that copper prices could "remain resilient" in the next few weeks between $9,000 and $10,000 due to a tightening in China's copper indicators, until demand-related tariff shocks materialise.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange (SHFE), which monitors copper stocks in warehouses, Last week, the weight of coal was 80,705 tonnes, down 70% from the end February.

Stocks in COMEX owned warehouses The highest level since 2018. The United States is seeing a rise in metal imports due to a Washington investigation that could result in new copper tariffs.

Aluminium fell by 0.2% at $2,474 per ton. Zinc fell by 0.5% to 2,667. Lead gained 0.8%, to $1,992.5. Nickel fell by 0.1%, to $15,620. Tin fell 0.1%, to $32,550.

The market will be watching the U.S. Inflation data on Tuesday to get clues about Federal Reserve's monetary policies.

(source: Reuters)