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Copper drops as Middle East conflict renews inflation risk

Copper drops as Middle East conflict renews inflation risk
Copper drops as Middle East conflict renews inflation risk

As tensions escalated between the U.S.A. and Iran, and oil prices rose, fears of inflation and growth were heightened.

Benchmark 'copper' on the London Metal Exchange?was down by 0.3% to $13,443 per metric tonne at 1037 GMT.

After renewed military strikes by the United States against Iran, concerns about energy shipments via the Strait of Hormuz resurfaced.

The focus was also on the falling copper stocks. The copper stocks in LME approved warehouses fell by more than 20 percent since May's end, to a 4-month low of 305,200?tons.

The LME system is due to receive another 130,525 tonnes of metal or cancelled warrants.

Sources in the industry say that a large amount of this copper will be heading to the United States, where President Donald Trump may impose tariffs on metal used for construction and power plants.

Since President Donald Trump's order to launch a national-security probe in February of last year, traders and producers have shipped metals into the United States.

Since then, the copper stocks in storage registered by Comex have increased nearly 600%. .

Copper stocks are found in warehouses monitored by the Shanghai Futures Exchange Since the middle of March, 100,271 tonnes have fallen by nearly 80%.

Alastair Munro is a senior base metals analyst at broker Marex. He said that rapidly falling stocks create a 'higher price floor' across all metals.

The markets are watching Kevin Warsh’s first appearance as Federal Reserve chair before Congress and the U.S. Inflation data to get a clue about dollar direction.

The expectation of tighter monetary policies in the United States has boosted the U.S. dollar, making metals priced in dollars more expensive for holders of other currencies. This also weighs on demand.

Lead fell by 1.1% to 1,876, zinc declined 1.3% to 3,569, tin dropped 0.1% to $53,080, and nickel declined 1.2% to 16,545.

(source: Reuters)