June 27 (Reuters) - Copper futures inched higher on Thursday, although a firmer dollar and uncertainty over economic recovery in top consumer China kept prices of the red metal near a two-month low.

Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange was up 0.1% at $9,551.00 per metric ton, as of 0203 GMT. Still, the contract traded near its lowest since April 18 hit in the previous session.

In the broader market, the dollar was on the front foot and stood near an eight-week high against a basket of currencies. A stronger dollar makes greenback-priced commodities less attractive to holders of other currencies.

The most-traded August copper contract on the Shanghai Futures Exchange was flat at 77,980 yuan ($10,729.08) a ton.

In industrial metal prices, downside momentum has proven resilient as commodity demand continues to weaken amid a precarious global macro landscape, analysts at TD Securities said in a note.

"Inventory levels of copper continue to surge in China, while local premiums remain low, signaling little sign of physical demand to back to euphoric positioning in the West," according to the note.

LME aluminum was trading 0.3% lower at $2,504 a ton, nickel edged up 0.4% to $17,110, zinc was flat at to $2,940, lead eased 0.1% to $2,191, and tin rose 0.4% at $31,965.

SHFE aluminum rose 0.1% to 20,255 yuan a ton, nickel gained 0.8% to 135,100 yuan, lead was up 0.6% at 19,230 yuan, while zinc climbed 2.1% to 24,250 yuan and tin was steady at 266,600 yuan.

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DATA/EVENTS (GMT)

0900 EU Consumer Confid. Final June

1230 US Durable Goods May

1230 US GDP Final Q1

1230 US Initial Jobless Clm Weekly

($1 = 7.2683 Chinese yuan) (Reporting by Ashitha Shivaprasad in Bengaluru; Editing by Sherry Jacob-Phillips)