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Copper prices fall on uncertainty over tariffs and a stronger dollar

The copper price fell on Tuesday due to a stronger dollar and the uncertainty surrounding U.S. Tariffs. It was down from its highest level in almost two weeks, after problems continued at a large Congo mine.

The price of three-month copper at the London Metal Exchange fell by 0.3%, to $9.585 per metric ton, as of 1015 GMT, after reaching its highest level since May 14, when it was $9,634.

Nitesh Sha, a commodity strategist at WisdomTree, said: "We don't really know how the U.S. and European negotiations will progress."

The EU stated on Monday that the decision by U.S. president Donald Trump to abandon his threat to impose tariffs of 50% on imports from the European Union starting next month has given new momentum to trade negotiations.

U.S. Comex Copper Futures fell 1.8% to $4.75 a lb. This brings the premium over LME Copper to $888 per ton.

The dollar's strength also weighed on the market, as it made dollar-denominated investments more expensive for buyers who use other currencies.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange's most traded copper contract fell by 0.08%, to 78210 yuan (10,878.36 dollars) per ton.

According to Chinese consultancy Everbright Futures, the end-user market in China is slowly slowing down and fundamentals may weaken, as copper demand nears its off season.

Ivanhoe Mines' suspension of its production forecast for this coming year due to seismic activity at their giant mine in Democratic Republic of Congo has helped limit copper losses.

The DRC is Africa's largest copper producer.

Other LME metals include aluminium, which fell 0.3%, to $2456 per ton. Zinc was unchanged at $2701,50. Lead was down by 0.8% at $1976, Nickel was down 1.8% at $15,310, and Tin was up 0.5% at 32,650.

(source: Reuters)