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London copper slips on firm dollar, Shanghai up

London copper costs declined on Wednesday, hurt by a firm dollar and looming concerns about the U.S. economy and demand from top customer China, while the Shanghai agreement increased.

Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange shed 0.5% to $8,886 per metric load by 0158 GMT, reversing gains in the previous session and falling to a more than four-and-half month low. However, the most-traded September copper agreement on the Shanghai Futures Exchange acquired 0.8% to 71,720 yuan ($ 9,987.47) a load, as the majority of metals in Shanghai were catching up the gains in London in the previous session.

The dollar index recuperated ground and was last at 103.20, making greenback-priced metals like copper more pricey.

The dollar will claw back a few of its recent losses over the coming 3 months on expectations monetary markets have once again gone too far in pricing in a lot of Federal Reserve interest rate cuts this year, a Reuters survey of foreign exchange strategists found.

Copper experienced big sell-offs amidst as threat possession investors left the market after last week's information by the U.S. sparked worries of economic downturn.

The sell-off was intensified by weak need in top consumer China. The country is due to release its July trade information later in the day.

LME aluminium slipped 0.3% to $2,289.50 a lot, zinc moved 0.7% lower to $2,583, nickel reduced 0.5% to $16,305, while tin increased 0.2% to $29,695.

SHFE aluminium was 0.9% greater at 18,995 yuan a. heap, tin added 1.6% to 246,070 yuan, nickel. added 0.5% to 129,570 yuan, while zinc declined 0.6% to. 22,005 yuan.

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(source: Reuters)