Aluminum and Copper

Copper falls as market braces for new U.S. tariffs on China

Copper falls as market braces for new U.S. tariffs on China
Mining News Pro - A public comment period for proposed tariffs on Chinese imports worth $200 billion passed at 0400 GMT.
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According to Mining News Pro -

* Copper prices set for second consecutive weekly loss
* Investors fear tariffs will hurt growth, metals demand (Updates with official prices) By Peter Hobson LONDON, Sept 7 (Reuters) - Copper prices fell towards 14-month lows on Friday and were set for a second consecutive weekly loss as investors braced for new U.S. tariffs on China.


A public comment period for proposed tariffs on Chinese imports worth $200 billion passed at 0400 GMT. China has warned it would retaliate if they are applied. Fears that tariffs will damage economic growth and demand for metals are hitting copper despite positive supply and demand fundamentals, Societe Generale analyst Robin Bhar said.

"Everyone is waiting for the tariffs to be applied or not. Rebounds in metals (prices) will simply not get going while you have these macro fears," he said.

COPPER: Benchmark three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange traded down 0.4 percent at $5,905 a tonne in official rings, nearing its August low of $5,773 and down 1.2 percent this week. PRICE ROUT: The U.S.-China trade conflict has helped push copper prices down some 20 percent since early June. China accounts for nearly half of global copper demand estimated at around 24 million tonnes this year. COPPER STOCKS: On-warrant stocks of copper available to the market in LME-registered warehouses rose by 850 tonnes to 147,450 tonnes but are still down from more than 234,000 tonnes in mid-August, signalling a tighter market. CHINA STOCKS: Stockpiles in Shanghai Futures Exchange (ShFE) warehouses have fallen to 136,051 tonnes from more than 300,000 tonnes in April. CHINA TREATMENT CHARGES: Treatment and refining charges (TC/RCs) paid to China`s copper smelters are set to drop below $80 a tonne next year as processing capacity expands and copper concentrate falls into a deficit. ALUMINIUM/RUSAL: LME Aluminium did not trade but was bid up 1.3 percent at $2,065 a tonne - though leaving it down 2.4 percent this week - after Reuters reported that European customers would avoid deals with Russian producer Rusal , which is under U.S. sanctions, at an industry event next week. ALCOA STRIKE: Workers at Alcoa`s alumina and bauxite operations in Western Australia voted to continue a strike. Alcoa has said the strike cut production of alumina, used to smelt aluminium, by only about 15,000 tonnes in August. "However, prolonged industrial action will be a concern to many with the market already tight," analysts at ING said. Higher alumina prices could raise the cost of aluminium.

ALUMINIUM SPREAD: The discount of cash aluminium over the three-month contract rose to the highest since October 2015 at $37.50.


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