Latest News

The dollar is stronger and the US tariffs are fading, which has led to a decline in copper prices.

On Thursday, copper prices fell from their record highs?on the strength of the dollar and the easing of concerns about the possible imposition?of U.S. Tariffs on the metal.

Benchmark three-month Copper?on the London Metal Exchange?slid 0.8% at 1030 GMT to $13,082 per metric ton, after touching a record high of $13,407 Wednesday. U.S. president Donald Trump announced on Wednesday that he would not impose tariffs on lithium, rare earths and other essential minerals. Copper is listed as a?U.S. The U.S. has a list of critical minerals that could face a 15% import tariff as early as 2027. However, Trump did not mention this in his statement.

Nitesh Shah, commodity strategist at WisdomTree, said that if there is a reduction in the desire to impose tariffs on other metals now, it will reduce the risk of copper. "So there might be a small premium going away."

The premium on the LME cash copper contract for the three-month ahead The price of metal has dropped to $44 per ton from $90 on Monday, which indicates a less urgent demand for metal.

The dollar's strength also affected prices. The dollar is stronger, making metals denominated in dollars more expensive to buyers of other currencies.

Zinc rose 1.5% to $3325.50 per ton after touching $3355 - its highest level since February 3, 2023. The cash LME Zinc contract traded at a $14 discount per ton compared to the three-month ahead .

Shah, who is a zinc expert, said that he did not believe the supply of zinc would be particularly tight in the future.

Lead rose 0.3% to $2.084.50, a new two-month record. Tin increased 0.5% to $53,715, a close second to the record high of $54,760 set on Wednesday.

Nickel fell 1.9% to $18,350, after touching a high of 19 months in the previous session, in a bullish beginning to 2026. Aluminium, on the other hand, dropped 0.6% to $3168.

David Wilson, senior commodities strategist at BNP Paribas, said: "It is very difficult to think that these kinds of parabolic price increases are sustainable." (Reporting and editing by David Goodman. Additional reporting by Amy Lv, Lewis Jackson, and Tom Daly)

(source: Reuters)