Soaring U.S. aluminum prices to diverge from LME after
Rusal sanctions
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[April 18, 2018]
By Pratima Desai
LONDON (Reuters) - Aluminium prices in the
United States have soared and are expected to diverge from those traded
on the London Metal Exchange after the U.S. Treasury Department imposed
sanctions on Russian producer Rusal <0486.HK>.
This is because large amounts of Rusal's metal produced before sanctions
were imposed on April 6 are expected to be warranted for delivery
against the LME's aluminum contract, a move expected to result in
sliding or stagnating prices.
Rusal's aluminum was suspended from the LME's list of approved brands
from Tuesday, but its metal already in LME registered warehouses before
the sanctions were imposed will not be affected.
However, sources say, many banks, traders and brokers will be wary of
holding any Rusal aluminum, even if it was produced before April 6, and
will offload it as soon as possible onto the LME, a market of last
resort during times of low demand.
Data from the exchange showed aluminum stocks in LME warehouses
originating from producers in eastern Europe stood at 450,650 tonnes or
36 percent of the total as of April 6. Sources say this category would
be metal mostly produced by Rusal.
Stocks of aluminum in LME warehouses since April 9 have surged more than
12 percent to 1.42 million tonnes.
(For a graphic on 'LME aluminum stocks' click https://reut.rs/2Hb7RFw)
"Lots of people are nervous about holding Rusal's aluminum, even if it
is pre-sanction, that will create a discount," said Oliver Nugent,
commodities strategist at ING.
According to the U.S. Geological Survey, the United States produced
741,000 tonnes of aluminum last year. It imported 6.2 million tonnes of
metal and semi-fabricated products, of which more than 700,000 tonnes
came from Russia.
"U.S. premiums for aluminum are up, there needs to be a divergence
against the LME to incentivize exports of primary metal and semi
products to the United States," Nugent said
Physical market transactions are typically based on a premium - above
$460 a tonne for aluminum in the United States and up 15 percent since
April 6 - above a price set on futures exchanges such as the LME.
U.S. premiums have doubled since January when the market started
factoring in tariffs on aluminum imports.
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Marked cylindrical aluminium ingots are seen stored at the foundry
shop of the Rusal Sayanogorsk aluminium smelter outside the Siberian
town of Sayanogorsk, Russia, March 15, 2017. REUTERS/Ilya Naymushin
-/File Photo
(For a graphic on 'U.S. aluminum premiums' click https://reut.rs/2HbF7wc)
However, given Rusal accounted for more than six percent of global
aluminum supplies estimated at around 63 million tonnes last year,
worries about shortages have fueled a rally in LME aluminum, up more
than 20 percent to $2,450 a tonne.
"LME prices might go up in the near term, but people will get over the shock and
remember there aren't really any real shortages," an aluminum consumer in Europe
said.
(For a graphic on 'China, U.S. aluminum production' click https://reut.rs/2JUYiMH)
A surplus in top producer China could fill the deficit in the rest of the world,
but this would mean premiums would have to be high enough to incentivize
shipments to the United States and elsewhere.
These premiums would need to cover transport costs and a 15 percent levy on
exports of primary aluminum from China.
(For a graphic on 'China aluminum exports' click https://reut.rs/2H99gfr)
"In terms of foreign material, Rotterdam duty unpaid premiums, for example, have
been around $100 a tonne for the past two months," analysts at ICBC Standard
Bank said in a note published last week.
"However, if they now also begin to move higher, U.S. mid-west premiums would
similarly need to increase in order to incentivize the re-routing of metal."
Major Japanese trading houses shunning Rusal's metal and scrambling for metal
elsewhere have also seen physical market premiums for Japan rise to three-year
highs at $170 a tonne from $117 on April 9.
(For a graphic on 'Aluminium premiums' click https://reut.rs/2JSEGZs)
(Reporting by Pratima Desai; Editing by Veronica Brown and David Evans)
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