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Copper edges down as macro concerns weigh on tariff support | Collector
Copper edges down as macro concerns weigh on tariff support

Copper edges down as macro concerns weigh on tariff support

SINGAPORE: Copper edged lower on Wednesday morning, as volatility in the Middle East conflict and macroeconomic concerns offset continued price support ​from U.S. tariff expectations. Benchmark three-month copper on the London ‌Metal Exchange declined 0.36% to $13,566.5 a metric ton as of 0300 GMT. The most-traded copper contract on the Shanghai Futures Exchange was down 0.38% to 104,010 yuan ($15,354.52) ​a ton. Oil prices rose on Wednesday after the U.S. launched new strikes ​on Iran. The war in the Middle East has pushed ⁠energy prices up and strained manufacturing, a key sector for copper demand. Official ​data released on Wednesday showed China’s producer prices rising for a third ​straight month in May, to the highest level since 2022, driven by rising commodity prices and improved demand in certain industries. Inflation concerns also remained front of mind, ​with markets looking to U.S. inflation data that’s set to be ​released later on Wednesday. Better-than-expected U.S. jobs data last Friday boosted the dollar and raised the ‌likelihood ⁠of a Fed rate hike this year, rattling the copper market. Higher interest rates generally dampen the demand prospects for growth-dependent industrial metals. Price support continued to come from expectations of a decision on U.S. copper tariffs, likely in ​the second half ​of the ⁠year. The U.S. has floated a possible 15% levy on copper imports from the start of 2027, followed ​by 30% from 2028. Total copper stocks in LME-registered warehouses ​have ⁠declined each day since May 28, according to LME data. Among other LME metals, aluminium dropped 1.54%, zinc lost 0.58%, lead lost 0.55%, nickel lost ⁠0.77% ​and tin dropped 1.86%. Elsewhere on SHFE, aluminium ​lost 0.89%, zinc dipped 0.2%, lead lost 0.59%, nickel dropped 2.19% and tin dropped ​2.16%.

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