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The dollar's strength and macro-economic headwinds are expected to cause a weekly decline in copper.

The copper price is expected to fall by at least 1% on Friday due to a stronger dollar and continuing macroeconomic concerns. However, dip buying has limited the loss.

Benchmark three-month?copper on the London Metal Exchange fell by?1% at $13,137 per metric ton?by 3:00 GMT.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange's most traded copper contract remained largely unchanged, with a 0.1% increase at 101,360 Yuan ($14900.84) per ton.

The copper price was expected to drop by over 3% in both markets at the end of this week.

The U.S. dollar gained 0.09%, partially reversing Thursday's ?decline and making greenback-denominated commodities more expensive for buyers using other currencies. Other economic headwinds from the Middle East war helped push the key U.S. Inflation indicator to its highest level in three year in May.

Industrial minerals that are dependent on growth have been impacted by inflation and expectations of higher interest rates.

In a note, Chinese broker, Jinrui Futures (a subsidiary of Jiangxi Copper), wrote that lower?Shanghai Copper prices had brought back some buying interest to the market on Thursday.

China's Yangshan Copper Premium The, which measures the buying appetite of the largest consumer in the world, reached its highest level in three weeks.

Copper stocks on LME Stocks on the CME continued to decline. increased. Material has been withdrawn from U.S. storage facilities ahead of President Trump's recommendation next week to introduce tariffs on imports of copper. Aluminum largely brushed aside jitters following this week's tentative Middle East Peace after a cargo ship said it was?hit by a projectile on the Strait of Hormuz. It fell 0.32% on the LME and 0.59% on the SHFE. The LME has seen the price of the light metal?fall 6% since the beginning of the week, as the Middle East premium declined.

Zinc fell by 1.31% among?other LME Metals. Lead lost 0.44%. Nickel dropped by 1.27%. Tin decreased by 2.52%.

Nickel fell 1.91%, tin dropped 2.02%, and zinc was down 1.17% on SHFE. Lead also remained unchanged, only up 0.03%.

(source: Reuters)