(Updates with closing prices)

By Eric Onstad

LONDON, Dec 5 (Reuters) - Copper fell to its lowest level ina week on Wednesday after comments by U.S. President DonaldTrump stoked more worries about trade tensions with top metalsconsumer China.

Most other industrial metals were in the red due to concernabout growth in China and after the country's currency slipped.

Markets were unconvinced when China expressed confidence onWednesday that it could reach a trade deal with the UnitedStates, after Trump renewed warnings he would revert to moretariffs if the two sides cannot resolve their differences. urn:newsml:reuters.com:*:nL4N1YA1NB MKTS/GLOB

"We're seeing a bit of red, mainly to do with Trump'scomments about liking tariffs, plus the renminbi weakened afterhaving strengthened during the past several days, that basicallydid the damage," said Ole Hansen, head of commodity strategy atSaxo Bank in Copenhagen.

"Copper touched the upper end of its range but failed tobreak above yesterday and then the tariff talk sent it lower."

Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange CMCU3 closed down 0.6 percent at $6,174 a tonne, after touching$6,142, the lowest since Nov. 28.

* ZINC: LME benchmark zinc CMZN3 rose 1.2 percent to endat $2,619 a tonne, underpinned by shortages in the refinedsector that have whittled down inventories.

"The speculative short in zinc is one of the smaller shortsof the complex at 4.4 percent of open interest," Alastair Munroat broker Marex Spectron said in a note.

* ZINC STOCKS/SPREADS: LME zinc inventories MZNSTX-TOTAL fell further to 110,700 tonnes, down more than half sincemid-August to the lowest since January 2008.

The premium of cash zinc over the three-month contract CMZN0-3 hit another record high of $122 a tonne, indicatingsevere shortages of nearby material.

* STEEL: China's construction steel rebar jumped more than 4percent, providing support to steel-linked metals zinc andnickel. LME nickel CMNI3 added 0.8 percent to finish at$11,225 a tonne. urn:newsml:reuters.com:*:nL4N1YA2MQ

* BHP/NICKEL: BHP BHP.AX received approval from the localAustralian government to develop the Venus nickel mine that willfeed its Nickel West battery chemicals business. urn:newsml:reuters.com:*:nL4N1YA278

* U.S. DOLLAR: The greenback .DXY edged up, puttingfurther pressure on metals as commodities priced in dollarsbecame more expensive for holders of other currencies.

* ALUMINIUM TECHNICALS: Aluminium CMAL3 slipped 0.3percent to close at $1,969 a tonne. However, it recently brokeabove a descending channel, which opens up a move towards$2,007, Stphanie Aymes, head of technical analysis at SocieteGenerale, said in a note.

"This must be reclaimed for denoting signs of a largerrebound towards $2,060."

* PRICES: Lead CMPB3 shed 1.2 percent to finish at $1,983and tin CMSN3 was barely changed, up 0.03 percent at $19,180.

<^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^Top Base and Precious Metals Analysis - GFMS http://tmsnrt.rs/2lvmIzW

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^> (Additional reporting by Mai Nguyen in Hanoi; Editing by MarkPotter and Kirsten Donovan) ((eric.onstad@thomsonreuters.com; +44 20 7542 7093; Twitter https://twitter.com/reutersEricO ; Reuters Messaging: eric.onstad.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net))

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