HANOI, April 16 (Reuters) - Copper prices in both London and Shanghai were set for their weekly rise on Friday, after some banks raised their outlook on the metal.

Goldman Sachs said copper could reach $15,000 a tonne by 2025 and raised its 12-month target to $11,000 a tonne, while Citi said on Monday copper consumption could "materially overshoot our base forecasts in 2021" and recommended clients to take bullish copper exposure over the next few weeks.

However, subdued physical indicators still pressured prices.

Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange fell 0.3% to $9,257 a tonne by 0207 GMT, still up 3.6% for the week.

The most-traded June copper contract on the Shanghai Futures Exchange advanced 1.9% to 68,710 yuan ($10,522.85) a tonne, tracking overnight gains in London and rising 2.8% week-on-week.

Yangshan copper premium fell to $50 a tonne, its lowest since Nov. 20, indicating falling demand for imported copper into China despite the second quarter being a traditionally strong consumption season.

Meanwhile inventories in LME and ShFE warehouses have been rising.

FUNDAMENTALS

* LME aluminium fell 0.4% to $2,330.50 a tonne, nickel dropped 0.2% to $16,340 a tonne. ShFE zinc rose 1.3% to 21,870 yuan a tonne and ShFE tin advanced 1.4% to 182,040 yuan a tonne.

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

MARKETS NEWS

* Asian shares were little changed ahead of a raft of Chinese economic data, while world stocks on the whole flew at a record level, fuelled by strong U.S. economic data that may herald a solid recovery ahead.

DATA/EVENTS (GMT)

0900 EU HICP Final MM, YY March

1230 US Housing Starts Number March

1300 EU Finance ministers meet

1400 US U Mich Sentiment Prelim April

($1 = 6.5296 yuan) (Reporting by Mai Nguyen; editing by Uttaresh.V)