Summary
- US-EU trade agreement boosted sentiment, with equities rising and EUR weakening.
- Chile is seeking exemptions from US copper tariffs, which has led to a sell-off in COMEX while LME remains stable.
- Gold slipped on stronger dollar and risk appetite.
Macro
US equity markets opened higher on Monday, supported by easing geopolitical tensions after Washington and Brussels reached a trade deal over the weekend. The agreement imposes a 15% tariff on most EU goods, half of the initially threatened rate, helping to ease tensions between the two trading blocs. In return, the EU has pledged to purchase roughly $750 billion in US energy products and military equipment over the next three years and invest around $600 billion in other American ventures. The euro weakened on the news, with the EUR/USD exchange rate falling below 1.164, while the dollar index advanced above 98.3. US Treasury yields remained steady, with the 10-year yield hovering around 4.40%.
Base Metals
The upside pressure continues to fade in the base metals complex, and a slight bearish bias is emerging. The dollar is strengthening, putting pressure on prices. Aluminium edged lower as prices struggled above $2,650/t, prompting the metal to soften into $2,631.50/t. Lead held its nerve above $2,000/t, as zinc is seen approaching the key $2,800/t level.
Copper remains in focus following news that Chile – the US’s top copper supplier, accounting for 70% of country imports – is seeking an exemption from forthcoming tariffs. If granted, this could significantly ease delivery pressures into US inventories. COMEX prices have responded to the news by falling over 5% to $2,700/mt premium over LME, reflecting reduced urgency in securing domestic supply.
Markets will closely watch trade developments between the two countries, and in case of an exemption, this could unwind the COMEX/LME arb that has been widening since early 2025. This dynamic is unlikely to be reflected on the LME, with copper prices being volatile but rangebound today, hovering below $9,800/t to settle at $9,793/t.
Precious Metals and Oil
Gold extended its decline, edging closer to $3,300/oz amid renewed investor appetite for risk and a stronger dollar. Silver held broadly steady, trading near $38.10/oz. Oil prices firmed, with WTI and Brent last seen just below $66.50 and 70.00/bbl, respectively.
All price data is from 28.07.2025 as of 17:30