BEIJING, Feb 9 (Reuters) - London copper rebounded on Friday after touching a near-three-month low in the previous session, but gains were limited by demand concerns from top consumer China and a firm U.S. dollar.

Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange was up 0.5% at $8,232.50 per metric ton by 0202 GMT.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange (SHFE) was closed on Friday and next week for the Lunar New Year holiday.

Copper was underpinned by mine-side supply issues and demand optimism amid expectations of rising demand from the new energy sector.

But a deep property sector crisis in China has weighed on sentiment given construction is a major consumer for base metals. And data on Thursday showed the biggest fall since 2009 in its consumer prices exacerbated near-term demand worries.

Meanwhile, copper inventories in the world's top consumer have been rising amid a traditional weak demand season. On-warrant Copper stocks on SHFE this week climbed to the highest since May 2023.

Also weighing on the market was a steady dollar after U.S. unemployment benefits again pointed to a resilient labor market, reinforcing the Federal Reserve's message that interest rates are unlikely to be cut in the near term.

A stronger dollar makes it more expensive to buy the greenback-price commodity.

Among other metals, LME aluminium dipped 0.1% to $2,219 per ton, lead shed 0.3% to $2,048.50, while nickel gained 0.5% to $16,080 and zinc was up 0.2% to $2,333.

For the top stories in metals and other news, click or

(Reporting by Siyi Liu and Mei Mei Chu;)