LONDON: Copper headed for a weekly loss on Friday as the dollar rallied ahead of the monthly US jobs report and signs of lacklustre demand in top consumer China.
The dollar hit an 11-year high against major currencies on Friday as investors bet the US jobs report would raise chances of interest rate hikes.
A strong dollar makes dollar-priced metals costly for non-US investors.
In China meanwhile, equities fell as investors digested comments by top officials that highlighted growth and debt challenges the country faces this year.
China must implement an expansionary fiscal policy this year to help prevent a sharp slowdown in the economy, Finance Minister Lou Jiwei said earlier.
On Thursday, Premier Li Keqiang called annual economic growth of about 7 percent the "new normal".
Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange fell 0.8 percent to $5,791.50 a tonne by 1015 GMT. Copper was facing a weekly loss of around 1.7 percent, its biggest decline in six weeks, after gaining 7 percent in February.
"We're still in a lull post Chinese New Year. I expect a bit of a pick-up but any price above $6,200-6,300 per tonne, copper will not stay there for very long," said Deutsche Bank analyst Grant Sporre.
"We're (still) in a surplus for this year and next even though mining companies have downgraded guidance and we've had 170,000 tonnes worth of disruptions so far this year," he said.
Daily LME data showed copper inventories rose by 4,675 tonnes to 323,050 tonnes, their highest level since January 2014.
Analyst Mark Keenan of Societe Generale said downside risk prevails in the medium term given a significant fall in the cost of production that could lower the floor price for copper.
"For copper, the widely understood floor of $5,500 a tonne is actually $1,000 cheaper if you factor in the currencies and the oil price fall," he said.
In other metals, bonded nickel premiums jumped by $20 after a city in eastern China closed several factories, including many nickel pig iron producers, as the government steps up enforcement of a new environmental law.
LME nickel was up 0.2 percent at $14,230 a tonne.
LME zinc dipped 0.15 percent at $2,017 a tonne, having hit its lowest since mid-January, while LME lead sank by 1.1 percent to $1,799, eroding gains of around 2.5 percent on Thursday, but still looked set to notch its biggest weekly gain since Jan 2014 at almost 4 percent.
"Recently there are some lead enquiries in Asia," said a source at a lead smelter, as scrap dealers buy low 99.97 purity LME lead instead of scrap batteries which have become more expensive.
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