Aluminium Prices Surge to Four-Year High on Middle East Supply Concerns
Market Reactions and Industrial Metals Overview
By Pratima Desai
Aluminium Market Soars Amid Middle East Tensions
LONDON, June 1 (Reuters) - Aluminium prices soared to their highest point in more than four years on Monday as Middle East supply risks escalated after the U.S. and Iran traded military strikes, traders said.
Benchmark aluminium on the London Metal Exchange traded 0.5% higher at $3,685 a metric ton in official rings. Earlier, it touched $3,707.50 to match a level hit on May 26 for its highest point since March 2022.
Impact of Middle East Supply Disruptions
The Middle East houses 9% of global smelting capacity for aluminium. The closure of the Strait of Hormuz has restricted aluminium exports from the region and limited imports of the raw materials needed to smelt the metal used to manufacture cars, aeroplanes, beer cans and building materials.
Analyst Predictions and Market Deficit
Analysts expect a large aluminium market deficit this year, with some floating numbers above 2 million tons.
"Aluminium remains the standout story," Britannia Global Markets said in a note. "The extreme backwardation highlights the severity of the squeeze."
Backwardation refers to the premium for nearby LME aluminium contracts against those along the maturity curve.
The premium for the cash aluminium contract over a three-month forward surged to 19-year highs above $100 a ton on Friday.
Copper and Other Industrial Metals Performance
Elsewhere, copper prices are ticking up as markets price in tight markets outside the U.S., which has over the last year sucked in vast amounts of copper due to expectations for tariffs on imports.
U.S. Tariffs and Copper Stockpiles
The U.S. is expected to decide by late June whether to impose tariffs on copper metal imports.
Total copper stocks in warehouses registered with Comex HG-STX-COMEX at 640,181 short tons or 580,762 metric tons are up more than 550% since U.S. President Donald Trump in February last year ordered an investigation of copper import tariffs.
Mine Supply and Broader Market Support
Expectations of weak mine supply growth have also helped reinforce elevated copper prices.
Supporting industrial metals overall was expanding manufacturing activity in top consumer China for the sixth consecutive month.
Copper was up 1.5% at $13,840 a ton, zinc gained 1% to $3,576, lead firmed 0.2% to $2,021, tin advanced 2% to $56,590 and nickel was little changed at $19,275.
(Reporting by Pratima Desai; Additional reporting by Dylan Duan; Editing by Thomas Derpinghaus and Shailesh Kuber)
