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

The copper price ranged on Tuesday. The most traded contract on the Shanghai Futures Exchange - SHFE - was slightly lower as lingering caution tempered the relief of a U.S. - China tariff truce aimed to ease trade tensions.

As of 0242 GMT, the SHFE contract had fallen 0.4% to 77,750 Yuan ($10,810.17) a metric ton. The London Metal Exchange's benchmark copper was unchanged at $9,521 per metric ton despite the trade agreement signed between Beijing and Washington.

Industrial metals rose on Monday after the joint U.S. and China statement promising to reduce tit for tat tariffs over 90 days, as well as work towards ending their trade conflict.

U.S. president Donald Trump has increased tariffs on Chinese imports to 145%. This is in addition to the duties imposed by the Biden administration and those he had imposed during his first term.

Other London metals include aluminium, which fell by 0.1% on Tuesday to $2477 per ton, zinc, up 0.4% at $2691, and lead, up 0.2% at $1980. Nickel, however, dropped 0.4%, to $15,570. Tin fell 0.5% to $22,420.

SHFE nickel dropped nearly 2%, to 123460 yuan. Aluminium gained 1.1%, to 19,975 Yuan per ton. Zinc was flat, at 22,235 Yuan. Lead gained 0.1%, to 16,940 Yuan. Tin fell 0.1%, to 260080 Yuan.

(source: Reuters)