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RTRS:METALS-Copper steadies; U.S. data, China demand in focus
 
* Copper trades in tight range so far this week
* Copper stocks in LME warehouses fall to fresh 32-month low
* Coming up: U.S. jobless claims, weekly; 1230 GMT

By Harpreet Bhal
LONDON, March 15 (Reuters) - Copper prices steadied on
Thursday, recovering after a 1 percent drop in the previous
session, but concerns about the outlook for demand from top
consumer China weighed on sentiment and kept prices within a
tight trading range.
Benchmark copper on the London Metal Exchange (LME)
rose 0.3 percent to $8,488 at 1008 GMT, after closing at $8,460
on Wednesday when it fell 1 percent.
Prices for the metal used in power and construction have
seesawed between around $8,400 and $8,600 this week, as
investors weigh an overall improved global economic growth
outlook against the disappointing copper demand recovery in
China.
"On the fundamental side you have two opposite forces - you
have the U.S economy which is improving and on the other hand
the demand in China is still weak so there is a lack of
fundamental drivers," said Gianclaudio Torlizzi, partner at
T-Commodity.
Helping keep copper prices from falling further was a
rebound in the euro, which bounced off one-month lows against
the dollar, while European shares paused near eight-month highs.
A weak dollar makes commodities priced in the U.S. unit
cheaper for holders of other currencies.
"Moves in financial markets are a risk to the downside for
base metals. We are ready to go short in case the equity market
loses steam," Torlizzi said.
Copper has risen around 11 percent so far this year, after a
21 percent slide in 2011, on a brightening economic outlook in
the United States and hopes that easy monetary policies around
the world would buoy asset prices.
But the demand from China, which consumes 40 percent of the
world's copper, is key to the outlook for prices.
"The demand this year is not looking particularly good, as
the cycle of rapid economic growth driven by fixed asset
investment is over and export-driven growth is also easing,"
said Zhu Bin, an analyst at Nanhua Futures in the eastern
Chinese city of Hangzhou.
Premier Wen Jiabao said on Wednesday China must embrace
slower growth and bolder political reform to keep its economy
from faltering. He also dampened hopes for any near-term easing
measures in the country's property
sector.




FALLING LME STOCKS
LME copper stocks continued to fall, down
2,875 tonnes to 267,750 tonnes, the lowest level since July
2009. The ratio of cancelled warrants - material earmarked for
delivery - to the total stocks at 33.47 percent.
Large amounts of copper have been moving from LME warehouses
to China over the past few months, pushing Shanghai copper
stocks to their highest in a decade, overshadowing a sluggish
rebound in copper demand after the Lunar New Year holiday.
Analysts said some Chinese companies were using part of the
copper inflow as collateral to obtain credit or selling for cash
to finance other investments, while real consumption remains
sluggish.
"Chinese corporations are surprisingly cautious on China
right now," said Jeremy Friesen, commodity strategist at Societe
Generale in Hong Kong, but added that Beijing's pro-growth
policy should help support healthy base metals demand through
the rest of the year.
"Beijing has enough ammunition both on the fiscal and
monetary side to shore up the markets when they need to, and we
expect they will. They will be there to offer support to keep
growth at a healthy 8.1 percent this year."
Earlier this month, China cut its 2012 growth target to an
eight-year low of 7.5 percent, though traders saw this figure as
still good. Actual growth in the world's second largest economy
has surpassed the government's target in the past years.

Aluminium was at $2,235 from Wednesday's close of
$2,229. Zinc rose to $2,080 from a close of $2,074.
Lead was at $2,117.75 from $2,012, tin at
$23,925 from $23,800 while nickel was at $19,401 from a
close of $19,575.

Metal Prices at 0939 GMT
Comex copper in cents/lb, LME prices in $/T and SHFE prices in yuan/T
Metal Last Change Pct Move End 2010 Ytd Pct
move
COMEX Cu 385.45 0.90 +0.23 444.70 -13.32
LME Alum 2233.25 4.25 +0.19 2470.00 -9.59
LME Cu 8494.25 34.25 +0.40 9600.00 -11.52
LME Lead 2117.25 15.25 +0.73 2550.00 -16.97
LME Nickel 19406.00 -169.00 -0.86 24750.00 -21.59
LME Tin 23901.00 101.00 +0.42 26900.00 -11.15
LME Zinc 2078.50 4.50 +0.22 2454.00 -15.30
SHFE Alu 16170.00 5.00 +0.03 16840.00 -3.98
SHFE Cu* 60280.00 -90.00 -0.15 71850.00 -16.10
SHFE Zin 15770.00 -40.00 -0.25 19475.00 -19.02
** Benchmark month for COMEX copper
* 3rd contract month for SHFE AL, CU and ZN
SHFE ZN began trading on 26/3/07
Source