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The most-traded June aluminum contract on the SHFE traded at 14,840 yuan ($2,362) per tonne as of 11.19am Shanghai time, up 218 yuan per tonne from Monday’s close.
Concerns of supply tightness stemming from the US sanctions placed on Rusal continue to dominate the aluminium market, with the strong sentiment for the light metal filtering through to the rest of the complex.
“We think the sanctions are a potential game changer for aluminium, given that Rusal supplies close to 700,000 tonnes of metal into the US market (14% of overall US imports) and accounts for 7% of global supply (at roughly 4.5 million tonnes),” Edward Meir, independent commodity consultant at INTL FCStone said on Monday.
“Aluminium prices surged as concerned emerged that UC Rusal may have to cut production as markets become increasingly off limits to their production. With Europe and the US consumer reluctant to take its metals, it appears alternative markets in the Middle East, Turkey and China are the only ones remaining open,” ANZ Research noted on Tuesday.
“The fallout to [London Metal Exchange’s] decision to stop accepting Russian material continues to play out, with traders frantically dumping metal into warehouses before the deadline,” it added.
Meanwhile, generally positive economic data out of China this morning provided further support to the base metals – see data section below.
Base metals prices
Currency moves and data releases