Business World

Industrial metals fall on China-US trade row

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LONDON — Most industrial metals prices fell further on Tuesday as investors grew increasing­ly nervous that a trade conflict between the United States and China could escalate, potentiall­y damaging economic growth and metals demand.

Copper and aluminum were at or near their lowest since April while zinc plunged to its weakest since August last year. A stock market sell-off, meanwhile, has wiped $1.5 trillion off the value of global shares.

PRESSURE

“The looming trade war is still the dominant topic and definitely weighing on sentiment,” said Commerzban­k analyst Daniel Briesemann.

Adding pressure was a strong dollar, weak May economic data in China, the world’s top metals consumer, and fundamenta­ls which do not suggest any metal is in short supply, he said.

“All ( metals) prices should continue to fall,” he added, predicting further losses in copper to $6,500 a ton or below, and in aluminum to $2,000.

Speculator­s were also turning negative on metals and driving prices lower, said brokers Marex Spectron. “Systematic selling (is) weighing on the complex with shorts building across all bar nickel, where long liquidatio­n is now having more of a price effect,” it said.

Benchmark copper on the London Metal Exchange (LME) ended down 0.60% at $6,713 a ton after reaching $6,692, the lowest since April 4.

On-warrant stocks available to the market in LME-registered warehouses fell to 234,000 tons from 264,575 tons a week ago, but remain comfortabl­y higher than 2017 levels, indicating adequate supply.

Potentiall­y supporting prices was a threat on Monday by workers at Codelco’s Chuquicama­ta copper mine in Chile to strike over plans to transform the open pit into an undergroun­d mine.

With US tariffs on $34 billion worth of Chinese goods due to take effect on July 6, US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin on Monday ramped up the rhetoric by saying restrictio­ns on investing in US tech firms would apply “to all countries that are trying to steal our technology.”

Among other base metals, LME zinc closed down 0.6% at $2,840 a ton after touching $2,815, the lowest since Aug. 7.

Aluminum reached its weakest since April 10 at $2,135 before finishing 0.10% higher at $2,158 a ton.

Nickel ended up 0.40% at $14,785, while lead fell 0.40% to $2,410 and tin edged 0.10% lower to $20,100. —

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