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Investors reduce risk following Israel's attack on Iran, causing copper and other metals to fall.

The price of copper, and other industrial metals, fell on Friday. This was due to a stronger dollar. Investors sold their risky assets following the attack by Israel on Iran.

The benchmark three-month copper price on the London Metal Exchange fell 0.5% by 1600 GMT to $9,653 per metric ton after hitting $9,532, its lowest since June 3.

After Israel launched an extensive military strike against Iran, the dollar index rose and stock markets around the world fell.

The dollar is stronger, making commodities priced in U.S. dollars more expensive to buyers of other currencies.

Alastair Mudro, senior base-metals strategist at Marex, said that the market has de-risked copper and aluminum.

The current events make it unlikely that we will run away from the topside. "Those who are looking for dips will be pleased by the declines."

LME copper was up by a fifth since April 7, when the price reached its lowest level since November 2023. This rebound continued until this week.

U.S. Comex Copper Futures fell 0.3% to $4.82 a pound. This brings the premium of Comex copper over LME copper up to $976 a tonne.

Munro stated that most of the selling came from Commodity Trade Advisor investment funds which are driven largely by computer programs. Chinese participants also emerged to buy at lows.

The most traded aluminium contract at the Shanghai Futures Exchange (SHFE), which is the largest metal exchange in China, gained 0.4% to 20,425 yuan/metric ton for the third consecutive day. This outperformed other SHFE Metals.

Analysts from a Hangzhou futures company stated that "aluminium has performed rather well compared to other metals recently, as the demand from the local market has been robust. SHFE stocks, however, have been falling."

Aluminium stocks In SHFE warehouses, the number of tons dropped to 110,001 in the week ending June 13 - the lowest level since February 2024 - and the largest drop since late March, when it fell by 54%.

Other metals include LME aluminium, which fell by 0.5% to 2,505 per ton. Lead also dropped 0.3% to 1,990, and zinc, which fell 0.6% to 2,627, after falling to its lowest level since May 1.

Nickel increased 0.3%, to $15.185. Tin rose 0.3%, to $32,755.

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(source: Reuters)