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The strong dollar and macro-headwinds are causing a weekly drop in copper prices

The London Metal Exchange saw copper prices fall on Friday and were on course to report a loss for the week as macroeconomic headwinds overpowered dip buying.

Benchmark three-month copper on the LME fell 0.78%, to $13,167 per metric ton by 0700 GMT.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange's most traded copper contract was boosted by bargain-buying. It rose 0.21%, to 101,560 Yuan ($14.930.24) per ton.

The red metal is expected to finish the week with a loss of more than 3% in the LME and just under 3% in the SHFE.

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

The U.S. Dollar lost 0.01% of its gains made earlier in the day. It nonetheless remains high, up 0.5% ?since the start of the ?week, weighing on greenback-denominated metal markets by making them more expensive for buyers using other currencies.

In May, the economic impact of the Middle East war helped to push an important U.S. indicator of inflation to its highest level for three years. Industrial minerals that are dependent on growth have been impacted by inflation and higher interest rates.

Aluminum was mostly stable as it took into account the jitters that accompanied this week's tentative Middle East peace following a cargo vessel being hit by a projectile at the Strait of Hormuz.

The LME was flat and the SHFE edged up by?0.11%. The LME has seen a?7% drop in the price of light metal since the beginning of the week, as the Middle East premium declined.

Zinc?lost 0.63 %, lead fell 0.24% and nickel dropped 0.17%. Tin also declined 0.06%.

On the SHFE, tin, nickel, and lead all gained, while zinc fell 0.27%.

(source: Reuters)