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Copper falls to two-week lowest, with Powell's speech in focus

Metal traders reported that copper prices fell on Wednesday, to their lowest level in almost two weeks, as funds sold. Consumers and producers were also sidelined, awaiting the speech of U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell, scheduled for later this week.

The dollar could be undermined by Powell's Friday speech, as the markets are looking for hints as to whether U.S. rates will be cut 25 basis points at the Fed meeting on September 16-17.

A weaker dollar could boost the demand for metals priced in dollars. Funds use this relationship to trade on a daily basis using numerical models for buy and sell signals.

The benchmark copper price on the London Metal Exchange fell 0.1% to $9,676 per metric tonne at 1023 GMT after hitting $9,673.50 earlier, its lowest level since August 7.

Alastair Mudro, Marex's senior base metals analyst, said: "Systematic flows dominate our space due to lack of wider participation."

The outlook is still unclear, and the markets are struggling to make meaningful moves in either direction.

Concerns about the demand for cash copper, especially in the top consumer China have led to a discount on the contract three months forward. The price of a ton is heading towards $100, the highest level since February.

Yangshan copper premium also indicates a sluggish market. The price of copper in China has dropped to $47 per ton, down from $100 per ton at the end of May.

Technically, the upside resistance lies around $9,475 per ton where the 21-day and 50-day moving averages are converging.

Traders reported that funds also sold aluminium which briefly fell below the 200-day average. The current price of a ton is $2,565

The price of three-month aluminum had earlier fallen to a new low for two weeks, at $2 558 per tonne. Last seen at $2,569. It rose 0.2%.

Other metals saw a 0.2% gain in zinc to $2,773, a 0.3% decline in lead to $1,967 and tin fell by 0.2% at $33,780. Nickel also dropped 0.5%, to $14,935 per ton. Reporting by Pratima Deai, Amy Lv, and Lewis Jackson. Harikrnan Nair, Mark Potter and Harikrnan Nair edited the article.

(source: Reuters)