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London copper prices fall on fears of US tariff

London copper prices fell on Tuesday due to concerns about possible U.S. duties on the metal, but a weaker dollar helped cushion the fall.

The London Metal Exchange's three-month copper contract fell 0.7%, to $9.554 per ton at 0708 GMT. Shanghai Futures Exchange's most traded copper contract fell by 0.1% to $10,796.72 per metric ton.

The U.S. president Donald Trump announced on Friday that he would double the tariffs on steel and aluminum imports, increasing them to 50% on Wednesday. This renewed concerns about potential tariffs for copper.

ANZ Research reported that "U.S. Trade officials are reviewing the impact on local industry of U.S. Copper imports, and a report is due in the coming weeks."

The dollar index (which measures the U.S. currencies against six major counterparts) hovered around the six-week low that was hit earlier in this session.

The greenback is softer, making assets dominated by the greenback more affordable for holders of other currencies.

Caixin/S&P Global Manufacturing PMI for China dropped to 48.3 from 50.4 in May, the lowest reading since 32 months. China's official PMI remained in contraction territory for May.

The LME registered warehouses reported a drop in copper stocks on Monday The 45% drop since mid-February has brought the total to 148.450 tons. This is the lowest level in over a year.

Other London metals fell by 0.9%, to $2.443.5 per ton. Zinc dropped 1% to $2.670, while lead declined 0.8% to $1.965.5, and nickel lost 0.7% to $15.425. Tin dropped 0.2% to $30,005.

SHFE aluminium dropped 1.1% to 19,860 Chinese yuan per ton. Lead fell 0.3% to 16570 yuan. Zinc fell 0.5% at 22,180 yuan. Tin eased by 1.2% to 248,800 yuan. Nickel rose 0.1% to 121,250 yuan. $1 = 7.1991 Chinese Yuan (Reporting and editing by Sumana Niandy)

(source: Reuters)