Metals – LME aluminium continues to surge on supply woes
LME aluminium price continued to surge for a second straight session amid worries over a potential ban on Russian supplies, largely ignoring the jump reported in on-warrant stocks. The latest LME data showed that on-warrant inventories for aluminium rose by 20kt, their seventh consecutive rise, to reach 303.6kt (highest since May 9th) as of yesterday, with the majority of the increase from Malaysia’s Port Klang warehouses. Meanwhile, cancelled warrants also declined for a tenth straight session to 48.3kt as of yesterday, signalling potential further inflows.
In China, the latest SMM survey showed China’s copper cathode production rising 13.2% YoY and 6% MoM to 909kt in September, as some smelters resumed normal operations. Meanwhile, a newly expanded smelter in the Zhejiang region reached its full production capacity, while a smelter in the Guangdong region resumed operations in mid-September.
Among other metals, SMM reported that Chinese primary aluminium production rose 7.3% YoY to 3.34mt in September. For the first nine months of the year, output rose 2.8% YoY to 29.9mt. Similarly, refined nickel output rose 7.7% YoY to 15.4kt in September. However, refined zinc output fell 3.1% YoY to 503.9kt last month, while YTD production also declined 3% YoY to 4.4mt. For lead, output rose 12.8% YoY and 10% MoM to 295kt in September.
For copper premiums, the latest SMM data shows Yangshan copper premiums in China surged to US$137.5/t (highest since October 2021) due to the lower availability of domestic supplies resulting in higher import demand for the metal. The nearby Shanghai Futures Exchange (ShFE) copper spread moved to a backwardation of over CNY1,600/t as of yesterday, indicating tight domestic supply conditions.
|