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London copper slides on firm dollar, Shanghai up

London copper rates decreased on Wednesday, injured by a firm dollar and looming issues about the U.S. and Chinese economies, while the Shanghai contract increased.

Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange shed 0.5% to $8,886 per metric lot by 0522 GMT, reversing gains in the previous session and being up to a more than four-and-half month low.

However, the most-traded September copper agreement on the Shanghai Futures Exchange acquired 0.3% to 71,380 yuan ($ 9,937.21) a heap.

Higher worldwide prices motivated more exports from China, while the narrowing disparity between the two markets will attract more cargoes into China this month, experts stated.

China's imports of unwrought copper and items were 438,000 metric lots last month, down 2.9% from a year earlier, customs data revealed on Wednesday.

The information likewise revealed the nation's exports grow at their slowest speed in 3 months in July, missing expectations and contributing to concerns about the outlook for the nation's huge manufacturing sector. Nevertheless, its imports swung back to growth.

The dollar index recuperated ground and was last at 103.31, making greenback-priced metals like copper more expensive.

The dollar will claw back some of its recent losses over the coming 3 months on expectations financial markets have once again gone too far in rates in too many Federal Reserve interest rate cuts this year, a Reuters poll of foreign exchange strategists discovered.

Copper experienced large sell-offs as investors left the market after data recently triggered worries of a U.S. recession.

LME aluminium slipped 0.3% to $2,290 a load, zinc moved 0.7% lower to $2,583, nickel reduced 0.7% to $16,275, while tin rose 0.2% to $29,700.

SHFE aluminium was 0.5% higher at 18,930 yuan a. lot, tin included 1.1% to 244,800 yuan, while nickel. slipped 0.2% to 128,710 yuan, and zinc. declined 1.2% to 21,885 yuan.

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(source: Reuters)