
Copper edges up as tight LME stocks counter lower China imports, Mideast tensions

Copper prices nudged up on Tuesday, as dwindling London Metal Exchange inventories helped it shrug off pressure from concerns about Middle East tensions, inflation, and lower China imports. Benchmark three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange was up 0.48% to $13,681.5 a metric ton by 0702 GMT.
The most-traded copper contract on the Shanghai Futures Exchange edged up 0.56% to 104,650 yuan ($15,452.42) a ton.
Traders have been shipping the red metal to the U.S. from LME warehouses, with the Donald Trump administration expected to decide on copper import tariffs at the end of June. Elsewhere, data released on Tuesday from top consumer China showed a marked decline in imports of unwrought copper this year, which capped price gains. For the first five months of 2026, China imported 2.01 million tons of unwrought copper and copper products, down 7% from a year earlier.
The Yangshan copper premium


