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RTRS: Copper steady as softer demand offset by dollar
 
By Julie Crust
LONDON, Oct 9 (Reuters) - Copper was steady on Thursday as
concerns about softer demand were partly offset by a slightly
weaker dollar and a rebound in equities markets.
"Relative to recent weeks, there is an air of greater
stability around, however temporary," said Steve Hardcastle,
analyst at brokerage house Sucden.
Three-month copper MCU3 on the London Metal Exchange was
at $5,340 a tonne in official trading, after earlier falling to
$5,220, near a 2-1/2-year low. The metal, used in the power and
construction industries, closed at $5,240 on Wednesday.
Copper prices have slumped about 40 percent from a record
high of $8,940 a tonne reached on July 2.
"Metals prices look likely to fall further as expectations
for demand fall away," Fairfax said in a research report.
"Metals prices are taking their lead from equity markets in
the current environment as an indicator for lower consumption
and lower funding of industrial growth."
European stocks rose by midday on Thursday, breaking a
three-day losing streak, after fresh moves by governments and
central banks to ease the financial crisis. [.EU]
"Although all attention is firmly focused on the credit
crunch, rate cuts and the financial market bail outs, the
deterioration of the real economy has not escaped traders of
industrial commodities," UBS said in a note.
"A worsening outlook for demand for metals and energy has
prompted a sell-off in all commodities that are sensitive to
global economic growth."
The market is also awaiting further details on the Shanghai
Futures Exchange's move to compulsorily close positions on 10
copper futures contracts. [ID:nSHA99356]
Aluminium MAL3 was at $2,298 a tonne from $2,250.

FURTHER OUTPUT CUTS SEEN
Zinc, lead, tin and nickel were all supported by
expectations that prices near or below the marginal costs of
production will likely force more output cuts from loss-making
mining companies.
Lead and zinc prices were also boosted by a Chinese local
government decision to close smelters, in a move expected to cut
China's lead and zinc output by 20 percent in the fourth
quarter, after an accidental discharge of arsenic in
southwestern China, a local newpaper reported. [ID:nSHA67040]
China is the world's biggest producer of zinc and lead.
Lead MPB3 was last quoted at $1,610/1,615 from $1,575,
while zinc MZN3 was quoted at $1,485.0/1,485.5 a tonne from
$1,430.
Nickel MNI3 was last quoted at $13,060/13,070, down from
$13,200 a tonne. The metal earlier fell to $12,625, its lowest
level since December 2005, on concerns about demand from
stainless steel producers.
Tin MSN3, seen as the metal with the strongest
fundamentals, was unchanged at $14,900 a tonne.

Metal Prices at 1214 GMT
Metal Last Change Pct Move End 2007 Ytd Pct
move
LME Cu 5330.00 90.00 +1.72 6670.00 -20.09
SHFE Cu* 0.00 -45720.00 -100.00 56880.00 -100.00
LME Alum 2289.00 39.00 +1.73 2403.00 -4.74
SHFE Alu* 14165.00 -65.00 -0.46 18180.00 -22.08
COMEX Cu** 236.65 0.00 +0.00 303.05 -21.91
LME Zinc 1488.00 58.00 +4.06 2370.00 -37.22
SHFE Zinc* 12285.00 -445.00 -3.50 18950.00 -35.17
LME Nick 13000.00 -200.00 -1.52 26350.00 -50.66
LME Lead 1610.00 35.00 +2.22 2550.00 -36.86
LME Tin 14900.00 0.00 +0.00 16400.00 -9.15
** 1st contract month for COMEX copper
* 3rd contact month for SHFE AL, CU and ZN
SHFE ZN began trading on 26/3/07

(Reporting by Julie Crust; editing by Peter Blackburn)
Source