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Copper prices fall to a one-week low due to profit-taking, China demand and concerns

The copper price fell to a new low of one week on Friday, mainly due to profit-taking following a rally driven by speculative fund managers. Meanwhile,?demand for physical copper in China was muted.

Benchmark?three month copper on the London Metal Exchange fell 1.2% to $12,955 per metric tonne by 1100 GMT, after reaching its lowest level since January 9 at $12,774.5.

Metal used in construction and power is down 5% from a record high of $13,407, reached on Wednesday. China's securities regulator, which is the world's largest metals consumer, has vowed to crackdown on excessive speculation following this week's near 10-year highs in its benchmark stock index.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange's most-traded copper contract closed the daytime trading down 2.3%?at 100 770 yuan (14,461.20 dollars) per ton.

Metals have been under pressure at different points this week during the Shanghai day session, as China has reduced its risk and authorities in China are trying to curb recent retail "frenzy", said Marex metals analyst Alastair Munro.

Yangshan Copper Premium - a sign that China has been suppressed by high copper prices - The price of a ton of copper fell by 16% to $32 on Friday, its lowest level since December 1. The copper inventories of ShFE-monitored storage facilities rose by 18% to 213,515 tonnes this week, the highest level since April. Aluminium, lead, and tin also saw a large increase.

Copper prices rose by?20% over the last two months due to concerns about the tightening of availability of the metal as a result?of mine supply disruptions, and stock flow to the U.S. in anticipation?of possible tariffs.

Technically, the closest support level for LME Copper is the?21 day moving average, which stands at $12,537.

Other LME metals include aluminium, which fell 1%, to $3.136 per ton. Zinc also dropped 1.9%, to $3.253, while lead fell 1.5%, to $2.068.50. Tin slid by 3.5%, to $49.795; and nickel, down 2.5%, to $18,110. (Reporting and editing by David Goodman, Amy Lv Additional reporting by Polina Devitt)

(source: Reuters)