Summary
- Trump’s softer tariff tone steadied sentiment, but markets remain hypersensitive to policy shifts.
- LME spreads stayed volatile, showing lingering tightness despite easing prices.
- Precious metals corrected as profit-taking set in.
Macro
US equities started Friday on a cautious footing, as fresh developments in trade rhetoric and yield dynamics unsettled momentum. President Trump signalled that the aggressive 100% tariffs on China may not be permanent, helping to ease some tension around the trade horizon. Meanwhile, the dollar strengthened, pushing the index above 98.5, and the 10-year Treasury yield rebounded after dipping below 4.0%, recovering towards established resistance. The more hawkish pricing in yields and dollar strength point to a fragile market mood that is highly sensitive to policy and geopolitical surprises.
Eurozone inflation held at 2.2% in the region’s final print, underscoring the ECB’s incentive to maintain a steady stance in the near term.
Base Metals
Spreads remained the key focus across the LME complex as volatility persisted into the week’s close. In copper, the cash-to-3-month spread widened close to $26/t, signalling a partial return of nearby tightness, while the 3-month price eased below $10,580/t after briefly testing resistance near $10,700/t earlier in the session. Aluminium spreads also widened, moving to $18/t, with the 3-month price consolidating around $2,770/t. Zinc’s cash-to-3-month premium narrowed to $116/t, coinciding with a retreat in the 3-month contract to around $2,930/t, suggesting a modest easing in nearby tightness following the recent spike.
Precious Metals and Oil
Precious metals saw a sharp correction as investors moved to lock in profits following recent record-breaking gains. Gold retreated from its intraday high above $4,375/oz to trade below $4,250/oz, while silver slid from near $54.5/oz to around $52/oz. The move reflects a cooling of speculative positioning amid firmer dollar sentiment and stabilising Treasury yields. With the Fed’s next policy signal still uncertain and risk appetite improving slightly, some short-term rotation out of safe havens appears likely. Oil prices also weakened, with WTI slipping below $57.3/bbl and Brent around $60.9/bbl, as soft demand signals and broader macro caution weighed on the energy complex.
All price data is from 17.10.2025 as of 17:30