
Copper climbs to over two-week high amid tariff uncertainty, Iran risks

Copper rose to a more than two-week high on Tuesday as U.S. tariff uncertainty and tightening supply outside the U.S. supported the market, while Middle East peace talks remained in focus.
The benchmark three-month copper contract on the London Metal Exchange was up 0.99% at $13,968.50 a metric ton at 0705 GMT after reaching $13,978, its highest point since May 14.
The most-traded copper contract on the Shanghai Futures Exchange (SHFE) climbed 1.86% to close daytime trading at 106,620 yuan ($15,769.39) a ton after reaching 106,720 yuan, its highest level since May 15.
The White House on Monday amended tariffs on some copper, aluminium and iron imports and lowered duties on some agricultural and industrial equipment, though the order did not resolve the broader copper tariff question that has driven regional dislocation in the market.
"Tariff uncertainty is likely to support market sentiment," analysts at ING Economics said.
COMEX copper's premium over LME widened, continuing to encourage shipment into U.S. warehouses. Meanwhile, the discount for LME cash copper against three-month copper


