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Copper drops for a third day amid fears of tech valuation

Copper fell for the third consecutive session on Tuesday. It hit its lowest level in almost two months, as industrial metals slid along with a wide sell-off of risky investments sparked off by fears about an overvalued technology sector and faded hopes of a U.S. interest rate cut.

As of 1026 GMT, the benchmark three-month copper price on the London Metal Exchange had fallen 0.7% to $10,702.50 a metric tonne. The metal, which is used for construction and power, and was expected to be a beneficiary of the AI boom, fell by as much as 1.1% earlier to $10,660.50. Its lowest price since November 5.

Copper has fallen by around 4.5% since the peak of 11,200 dollars it reached on October 29. One trader, however, attributed the recent drop in copper to a "correction", rather than to an AI bubble burst. He added that "the AI trend will continue".

LME Copper Stocks The highest level since October 1 was reached by an increase of 4,450 tons. Cash LME contracts were trading at a discount of $36.50 per ton to the forward three-month contract There is no shortage of metal in the near future.

The government shutdown delayed the release of September U.S. jobs data.

Investors are more sensitive to the labour market signals, as they re-evaluate the Federal Reserve's near-term course.

Aluminium, another LME metal, fell by 0.8%, to $2,792.50 per ton. It also lost ground for the third consecutive day, and reached its lowest level since October 21. Tin fell 0.4% to $35,665, and lead was unchanged at $2 037.50.

Zinc fell 0.6% to 2,977 dollars, its lowest level since October 20. Nickel dropped 0.3% to $14,595 after reaching a new seven-month low. LME nickel stocks The 257,832 tonnes are the highest since May 20,21. (Reporting and editing by Subhranshu Sahu, Shreyan Biswas and Subhranshu Sahu; Additional reporting by Dylan Duan & Lewis Jackson)

(source: Reuters)