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Copper prices fall on stronger dollar and muted Chinese demand

Copper prices fall on stronger dollar and muted Chinese demand

The copper price fell on Tuesday due to a stronger dollar, and signs that demand for metals from China, the world's largest consumer, was muted. However, a decrease in stocks at the London Metal Exchange helped limit the losses.

The benchmark LME three-month futures fell 0.4%, to $10.651.50 per metric ton at 1001 GMT.

Traders are waiting for more updates on the U.S. and China trade talks ahead of a high-stakes summit between the leaders of the two world's largest economies scheduled to take place in South Korea next week.

The market for copper used in construction and power was impacted by data that showed China's economy slowed down to its lowest level in a year in the third quarter.

"While Beijing will likely introduce additional targeted assistance in the coming month, the message is clear. China is entering a more mature, slower phase of expansion. Analysts at Sucden Financial say that the old investment-driven business model is losing steam.

Yangshan Copper Premium The price of copper, which reflects the demand for China's imports of copper, has fallen 38% in the last month, to $36 a ton. This is its lowest level since July. On Oct. 9, copper reached a 16-month peak at $11,000 due to multiple mine supply disruptions.

The daily LME data showed that the available copper stocks at the LME registered warehouses dropped to 127.350 tons. This was the lowest level since July after 2,000 new cancellations in South Korea.

The 21-day moving average at $10,529 per ton is the closest support for copper on the technical front.

Aluminium, among other LME metals rose by 0.2%, to $2,781.50 per ton. The Globe and Mail reported that a U.S. Canada trade agreement on aluminum, steel and energy may be ready to approve at the South Korea summit this month.

Zinc rose 0.9% to $3.003.50. Lead increased 0.2% at $1.992.50. Tin remained unchanged at $35,300. Nickel fell 0.2%, to $15,190. (Reporting and editing by Emelia Matarise; Additional reporting by Dylan Duan)

(source: Reuters)