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Shanghai copper prices fall as caution tempers US/China trade optimism

The copper prices fell on Tuesday. The most traded contract on the Shanghai Futures Exchange dipped lower as caution continued to linger, tempered by the relief of a U.S. - China tariff truce.

As of 0432 GMT the SHFE contract fell 0.3% to 77,790 Yuan ($10,818.89), while the London Metal Exchange's benchmark contract for copper rose 0.1% to $9.526 per ton.

Industrial metals saw a surge in demand on Monday following the Sino-U.S. agreement to temporarily reduce tariffs. Chinese duties on U.S. imported goods will fall to 10%, from 125%. U.S. duty on Chinese imports will drop to 30%, from 145%.

Copper prices reflected the fear that further negotiations would be a long and tedious process.

"78,000 Yuan is not a low amount, and the remaining U.S. Tariffs on China's Exports are still high, even though they are better than the 145% tariffs that were previously in place," said a Beijing based metals analyst.

He also mentioned the slower decline in SHFE copper inventory last week.

SHFE copper stock fell 10% between the end of April and last week. This is less than the declines that were 23.5% in the previous two weekends.

Other London metals include aluminium, which fell by 0.1% on Tuesday to $2477.5 per ton, zinc, which fell by 0.1%, and lead, up 0.3% at $1982.5, while nickel dropped 0.7% to 15520. Tin fell 1.2% to $22,200.

The SHFE Nickel fell by 2%, to 123230 Yuan. Aluminium gained 1.1%, to 19,980 Yuan. Zinc eased by 0.6%, to 22,185 Yuan. Lead gained 0.2%, to 16,950 Yuan. Tin was unchanged at 261,030 Yan. Hongmei Li (Reporting and Editing)

(source: Reuters)