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Copper falls listed below $9,000 level, triggering Chinese buying

Copper costs bounced from near fourmonth short on Thursday as the dollar slipped after U.S. information showed slowing inflation, leaving expectations of a. September interestrate cut from the Federal Reserve intact.

Buyers likewise went back to top customer China as rates. pulled back 15% from the all-time peak in May, supplying even more. support to costs.

Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange. traded 0.1% higher at $9,108 per metric lot as at 1631 GMT. It. earlier fell below $9,000 level for the first time since April.

It pared earlier losses after U.S. personal usage. expenses (PCE) rate index increased at 2.9% for second quarter,. slower than 3.7% in the first quarter.

Cooling PCE, a tracker of inflation by the Fed, increased. the possibility for an September rate cut to pressure the. dollar.

Weaker dollar makes greenback priced metals cheaper for. holders of foreign currencies, including China which consumes. half of the world's copper produced.

More copper rod plants in Jiangsu increased production this. week as orders flocked in after copper prices pulled back past couple of. weeks, a copper purchaser source said.

Things are finally moving. Physical copper market is coming. back to life after three months of grinding halt, the source said.

Copper premium, the quantity a Chinese buyer accepted pay on. top of LME copper prices to import copper, rose to $25 a lot. on Thursday, its highest in more than three months. << SMM-CUYP-CN >

Premium, a gauge of physical demand, turned unfavorable when. LME prices struck a record high of $11,104.50 in May, significance. copper providers needed to pay their clients to offer their copper.

LME lead was down 0.5% at $2,034.5 a lot, zinc. moved 0.1% lower to $2,684, tin slipped 1.2% to. $ 29,440, nickel was flat at $15,830 and aluminium. shed 1.1% at $2,275.

(source: Reuters)