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Copper falls to a one-week low before US Fed rate decision

Copper falls to a one-week low before US Fed rate decision

The price of copper fell to a new low on Wednesday, as traders reduced their positions in anticipation of the Federal Reserve's decision on U.S. rates. Meanwhile, the demand for metals from China - the world's largest consumer - was muted due to the recent rally.

The benchmark three-month copper price on the London Metal Exchange dropped 1.3% by 1600 GMT to $9,999 per metric ton, but remained above the 21-day moving median, which keeps it at $9.912.

Metal, which is used for power and construction, reached its highest level in 15 months on Monday, at $10,192.50.

Alastair Mudro, Marex's senior base metals analyst, said that China has been offering copper this week. It was the absence of a systematic bid, and even bearish mean-reversion sell signals that triggered weakness in the complex.

State data released on Wednesday showed that China's copper output rose 15% in August compared to the previous year.

Neil Welsh, Britannia Global Markets' head of metals, said that traders are waiting for clarity from the Fed, not only on the rate reduction expected, but also the direction of the future policy.

The dollar is down about 10% for the year to date and the labour data has softened. Traders are looking for signs that this could be the start of a series.

Aluminium, among other LME metals fell 1.1%, to $2,686 per ton.

The price of aluminium reached a new six-month record of $2,720, on Tuesday. This was when the spread between the cash contract and the three-month contract increased to $16 per ton. It was the highest level since March. This was a sign of tightness within the LME during the current settlement period, as short positions holders were forced to reduce or rollover their contracts.

The premium for buying aluminum tomorrow and selling it a day later - also known as tom next - fell to $2 per ton on Tuesday. From Tuesday's $13 per ton, the price has dropped to zero.

According to LME data, there was a long position holder who held more than 40% open interest in LME September Futures. There were also several short positions. <0#LME-FBR>

LME zinc fell 1.7% to 2,941, while lead climbed 0.2% to $2,000, tin dropped 1.4% to $34,380 and nickel declined 0.1% to $15,405. (Reporting and editing by Ed Osmond, Vijay Kishore and Amy Lv. Additional reporting by Amy Lv.

(source: Reuters)