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Copper wanders lower on China need concerns after newest information

Copper prices pulled away on Tuesday on persistent fret about the health of the Chinese economy and metals demand after fresh data.

Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange ( LME) eased 0.5% to $9,055 a metric heap by 1000 GMT, having acquired 1.1% in the previous session.

Data on Tuesday contributed to a string of current weak numbers, with China's unwrought copper imports sliding to a 16-month low in August and overall imports missing out on expectations, reflecting weak demand.

The economic story in China is certainly weak, customers are depressed and there's this massive overhang of unsold home, said Dan Smith, head of research at Amalgamated Metal Trading.

A trader in Asia expected copper to be up to $8,450 a heap.

Smith, however, said the picture was not all dismal.

Overall, we shouldn't be too cynical about the outlook for base metals. The electronic devices side of things and solar PV are doing rather well in China, he stated, referring to photovoltaic ( PV) technology used in photovoltaic panels.

Demand was growing at approximately 16% in 6 electronics company sectors in China as much as July, Smith included.

He expects copper to increase moderately in the coming months and end the year at about $9,500 a load.

Another positive signal was a rise in the premium to import copper into China << SMM-CUYP-CN > to $65 a lot, its strongest in more than eight months.

The most traded October copper contract on the Shanghai Futures Exchange (SHFE) closed 1.4% up at 73,110 yuan ($ 10,268.40) a load, tracking over night gains in London.

In other metals, LME aluminium relieved 0.5% to $2,339. a ton, nickel was down 0.5% at $15,820, zinc. dropped 1.2% to $2,697, tin lost 0.5% to $30,670 and. lead added 0.3% to $1,959.

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(source: Reuters)