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Aluminum hits a two-week low after US tariffs increase by 50%

Aluminum hits a two-week low after US tariffs increase by 50%

After the United States increased the import tariff of 50% on aluminum and its products, the price of aluminium fell to its lowest level for more than two weeks on Wednesday.

As of 0202 GMT, the most traded aluminium contract at the Shanghai Futures Exchange fell 0.44% to 20500 yuan a metric ton. It had touched its lowest level since August 4, at 20,430 Yuan, earlier in the session.

The benchmark three-month aluminum on the London Metal Exchange fell 0.16%, to $2,559.5 per ton. This is the lowest price since August 5.

The U.S. Commerce Department announced on Tuesday that it was increasing steel and aluminum tariffs for more than 400 products, including wind turbines and other appliances. It does not exclude goods in transit.

Investors are watching for signs of a rate cut by the U.S. Federal Reserve.

In a note published on Wednesday, ANZ analysts stated that a rate cut would boost metal demand and likely support economic growth.

On Wednesday, China also kept its benchmark lending rate in August at the same level for the third month in a row, signaling that it is not in a hurry to implement monetary stimulus.

SHFE copper dropped 0.41%. Nickel fell 0.77%. Lead lost 0.65%. Zinc was unchanged. Tin rose 0.67%.

LME copper moved little, while nickel fell 0.21%. Lead slipped 0.28%, and zinc increased 0.14%. (Reporting and editing by Harikrishnan Nair; Amy Lv, Lewis Jackson)

(source: Reuters)