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Copper prices fall as demand worries rise due to weak Chinese data

Copper and industrial metals fell on Friday, after weak economic data in China's top consumer fueled concerns about demand. Hopes of another Federal Reserve rate reduction this year also faded.

The benchmark three-month price of copper at the London Metal Exchange fell 0.6%, to $10,890 a metric ton, as of 1026 GMT. It had fallen as low as $10,000.25 earlier in the day.

Metal used in construction, manufacturing and power was still on track for a gain of 1.6% per week, after briefly crossing the $11,000 mark Thursday. On October 29, copper reached its all-time high of $11,200.

Analysts at brokerage Sucden Financial wrote in a report that they expect previous highs to act as strong resistances as the markets struggle to find fundamental catalysts powerful enough to sustain an ongoing breakout.

"We anticipate a short-term period of consolidation, especially if fundamental conditions do not change."

In October, China's factory production and retail sales increased at the slowest pace for over a decade. This put pressure on policymakers who are responsible for revamping this $19 trillion export driven economy.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange reported on Friday that copper inventories in warehouses it monitors fell 4.9% compared to a week earlier, reaching 109,407 tonnes.

As a result, the chances of an interest rate reduction in December have dimmed. A growing number of Fed policymakers are signaling reluctance to ease further.

The entire LME Complex was in the red. Aluminium dropped by 1.4%, to $2,856.50 per ton. Zinc fell by 1.1%, to $3,021. Nickel dropped 0.9%, to $14,845, its lowest level since August 1. Tin fell 0.6% to $ 37,005 while lead dropped 0.4% to $1,069.50.

Sucden Financial stated that "apart from tin, zinc and nearby spreads, near-by spreads are still in contango. This suggests availability of deliverable materials and limited tightness at the front end of the curve." Reporting by Tom Daly. Lewis Jackson and Dylan Duan contributed additional reporting. Subhranshu sahu, Mark Potter and Subhranshu sahu edited the article.

(source: Reuters)