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Copper falls after reaching record levels as fears of a tech bubble resurface

Copper fell more than 3% Friday after reaching a record-high earlier in the session. Fears of the AI bubble burst prompted a sell-off across a wide range of riskier assets.

Benchmark three-month Copper?on the London Metal Exchange? fell by as much as 3.5%, to $11,451.50. It was trading at $11,537.50, down 2.8% as of 1700 GMT.

Metal used in construction, manufacturing and power generation earlier hit a record of $11,952, just a few cents away from the psychologically important $12,000 mark.

After two weeks of gains, copper is expected to end the week at a 0.7% loss after fading optimism about Wednesday's U.S. Federal Reserve rate cut. Copper fell up to 4% on the U.S. Comex Exchange, falling from $5.21 per lb.

The sudden drop on Friday was attributed by traders to the fear that the fall in tech stocks would spread to?metals. Long positions in copper were liquidated as a result of a volatile market.

Ewa Mnthey, ING analyst, said: "We believe that in the near-term supply disruptions will keep prices at around $11,000/t." For the rally to continue, however, stronger demand, particularly from China, as the largest consumer, will be critical.

Copper inventories The Shanghai Futures Exchange reported on Friday that the number of tons in the warehouses it monitors rose by 0.5% during the last?week, to 89 389 tonnes.

Manthey also added that "the risk of demand destruction should not be overlooked." Chinese buyers are showing signs of price sensitivities.

The entire LME Complex turned red. Aluminium fell 1.1% to $2,866.50 per ton, and zinc lost 2.3% to $3129.50, after hitting a 13-month peak on Thursday.

LME data for?Friday revealed 1,800 tonnes of zinc inflows The 61,925 tonnage is the highest level since August.

Nickel fell 0.2% to $14,585, lead dropped 1.1% to 1,966.50 and reached its lowest level since October 16. Tin dropped 0.6% to $40,505 after hitting its highest point since April 20,22 due to supply concerns. (Reporting and editing by Subhranshu, Mrigank, Mrigank, Lewis Jackson, and Jane Merriman; Additional reporting by Amy Lv and Lewis Jackson; Pratima Desai and Amy Lv; and Tom Daly)

(source: Reuters)