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Copper falls from two-week highs as investors pause following rally

The price of copper eased on Tuesday as investors locked in profits after prices reached a two-week high. Meanwhile, uncertainty around a U.S. metal tariff limited losses.

As of 0715 GMT, the benchmark 'three-month copper' on the London Metal Exchange had fallen 1.09% to $13,887 per metric tonne. On Tuesday, it reached a two-week high of $14,056, surpassing the $14,000 barrier.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange's most active copper contract gained 0.37%, closing daytime trading at 106.380 yuan. ($15,712.51) per ton. This is lower than the 3-week high of 107.420 yuan, which was set during evening trade.

As the deadline for the U.S. government to submit its report by June 30 approaches, tariff uncertainty has continued to drive prices up. The commerce secretary will update President Donald Trump about domestic copper markets including refined copper and refinery capacity.

Trump?this Week amended tariffs on certain steel, aluminum and copper imports. But?traders? said that the changes had little direct impact on refined Copper while keeping the broader tariff risks in mind.

The LME's tightening supply also boosted sentiment. A widening premium for Comex copper over that of the LME increased the risk of dislocation.

Cash-to-three month copper discount The price of metal dropped to $4 per ton from $77 per ton on May 19 and increased as the number of cancelled warrants increased, indicating that more metal is being prepared to be withdrawn.

A ?stronger-than-expected U.S. job openings reading also weighed on metals, supporting the ?dollar and reducing expectations ?of near-term U.S. rate cuts.

Diplomacy between?U.S. Iran and the United States made little progress, and the Strait of Hormuz was closed while oil prices soared.

Aluminium, zinc, lead, and nickel all fell by 1% on the LME. Tin, however, fell 0.45%.

The price of aluminium on the SHFE fell by 0.22%. Zinc gained 1.17%. Lead rose 0.36%. Nickel lost 1.05%. Tin increased 1.03%. $1 = 6.7704 Chinese Yuan Renminbi (Reporting and editing by Dylan Duan, Lewis Jackson)

(source: Reuters)