(Updates prices, adds analyst comment and changes dateline to
London)
By Eric Onstad
LONDON, Aug 27 (Reuters) - Copper slipped on Wednesday,
breaking four sessions of gains, weighed down by a stronger
dollar, rising inventories and concern about demand in top
metals consumer China.
The benchmark three-month contract on the London
Metal Exchange was down 0.5% at $9,790.50 a metric ton by 0940
GMT, having hit a two-week peak of $9,862 on Tuesday.
LME copper has climbed by 11% this year, rebounding from a
more than 16-month low of $8,105 in early April.
"Chinese demand is showing signs of slowing, with headwinds
for the economy including tariffs and the ailing property
sector," said ING commodities strategist Ewa Manthey.
Data from China was mixed, showing industrial profits
declined for a third straight month in July against a backdrop
of weak demand and ongoing factory gate deflation.
The decline, however, was less than May and June, and
manufacturing sector profits climbed by 6.8%.
The improvement could be the result of a campaign the
Chinese government has been waging over the past two months to
reduce excess capacity in industry, including metals, said
Alastair Munro, senior base metals strategist at Marex.
Metals prices were also pressured by a firmer dollar
after U.S. President Donald Trump's move to fire Federal Reserve
Governor Lisa Cook, which renewed investor concern over the
central bank's independence.
A stronger U.S. currency makes dollar-priced metals more
expensive for buyers using other currencies.
Climbing inventories in warehouses registered by the LME and
U.S. Comex exchange also undermined sentiment.
LME copper inventories , which added another
1,100 tons in data released on Wednesday, have surged by 72%
since late June to 156,100 tons. Comex stocks have nearly tripled so far this year.
Among other metals, LME aluminium dropped 0.8% to
$2,616.50 a ton, zinc shed 0.7% to $2,793.50 and nickel
lost 0.6% to $15,200 while lead added 0.2% to
$1,991.50 and tin was up 0.2% at $34,275.
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($1 = 7.1529 Chinese yuan)