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London copper edges up after sell-offs, international demand concerns weigh

Rates of copper and other metals in London edged up on Monday as previous cost falls triggered some purchasing chance, while looming issues over global economies weighed on sentiment, capping additional gains.

Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange climbed up 0.2% to $9,074 per metric ton by 0135 GMT, while the most-traded September copper contract on the Shanghai Futures Exchange slid 1.3% to 73,000 yuan ($ 10,195.53) a lot.

Bullish aspects formerly such as strong China demand and smelters' output cut faded however investors still purchase the dip given the long-lasting optimism towards copper, traders said.

LME copper lost 8% over the past 4 weeks. Analysts at ANZ expect metal costs to bad quickly as current rates could trigger a supply action.

U.S. task development slowed more than expected in July, while the unemployment rate increased to 4.3%. This could increase worries that the labor market is deteriorating, possibly making the economy vulnerable to economic downturn.

The information began top of weak production activities in China, triggering a global selloff in risk assets.

The job report on Friday, however, sustained expectations of deeper interest cuts by the U.S. Federal Reserve, starting from September. That might boost industrial activities and metals demand.

LME aluminium added 0.1% to $2,266 a ton, zinc moved 0.6% greater to $2,668, tin rose 0.4% to $ 30,300, and nickel increased 0.4% to $16,340.

SHFE aluminium was 1.6% lower at 18,895 yuan a lot, zinc declined 1.6% to 22,485 yuan, tin dipped 0.2% to 247,800 yuan, nickel nudged 0.2% lower to 130,140 yuan.

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(source: Reuters)