* Shanghai copper futures lowest since 2009, gold hits 5-1/2 mth high
* Stocks tumble in Europe
* China central bank ready to ease policy if needed - Reuters report
* Yen edges higher as Australian dollar loses ground
* Wall Street set to open around 0.2 percent lower
By Marc Jones
LONDON, March 12 (Reuters) - A fall in copper to near four-year lows compounded increasing concern about China's economic slowdown on Wednesday to send a wave of unease through world financial markets.
Global stocks fell for a fourth day and copper
In Europe, bourses from London to Lisbon tumbled
"Markets are watching what is happening in copper with awe and trepidation," said Societe Generale head of currency strategy Kit Juckes. "It's partly ongoing concern about Chinese growth (or lack thereof) and nagging worries about the Ukraine. And partly it is just that the commodity bubble burst last year and not everyone noticed."
Copper's fall follows China's first domestic bond default which has raised concerns about a possible unravelling of the many loan deals which have used the metal as collateral.
The metal has been in freefall for the last three days but the worries finally appeared to be catching up with other markets. Stocks across Asia - although ironically not in China - had seen sizeable falls, while the Australian dollar
The aussie was last down 0.5 percent at $0.8935 though traders said it could have fallen much more had it not been for demand created by a big A$7 billion bond sale.
Japan's Nikkei
That mirrored a lacklustre performance on Wall Street, where soft data left investors no wiser on whether the U.S. economy's troubles were weather-related or something more worrisome.
Futures prices
CHINA CHILL
Economists are concerned that recent moves by Beijing to stamp out speculation on its rising currency and overly easy lending may have overshot and will damage the world's second largest economy.
This is adding to broader strains on emerging markets as they try to cope with shifts in global attitudes while recovering economies such as the United States begin to phase out the cheap money churned out in recent years.
In Europe, the FTSEurofirst 300
Investors were hoping Chinese data on industrial output, retail sales and urban investment on Thursday might show where the economy is heading.
Reuters reported that China's central bank is prepared to loosen monetary policy if economic growth slows further by cutting the amount of cash that banks must keep as reserves.
Citing sources involved in internal policy discussions, the report said an easing would happen if growth slips below 7.5 percent, and would be on top of money market operations and currency intervention through state banks that traders say have already loosened monetary conditions.
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CONFIDENCE WOBBLE
At least one U.S. scrap copper trader has suffered "large" losses after a buyer in China defaulted on a deal in the past week, one of the first signs that sinking prices and tightening credit are affecting the physical market.
With the tensions in Ukraine in the background, U.S. government bonds
Gold, another favourite of risk adverse investors, climbed to a 5-1/2 month high of $1,362.25 an ounce, while crude prices extended their pullback with U.S. oil
"The question in everybody's mind is - what is the biggest risk to oil? And it is China slowing down," said Jonathan Barratt, chief executive of commodity research firm Barratt's Bulletin in Sydney. "People have figured out that what happens in Ukraine doesn't matter to oil markets so much. It may impact other commodities, but not so much oil."
(Additional reporting by Wayne Cole and Manash Goswami in Sydney; Editing by Toby Chopra and David Stamp)
((marc.jones@thomsonreuters.com)(+44)(0)(207 542 9033)(Reuters Messaging: marc.jones.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net))
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Keywords: MARKETS GLOBAL/