Metals – LME aluminium on-warrant stocks decline
LME on-warrant aluminium stockpiles fell by 4,825 tonnes for a fifth consecutive day to 426,975 tonnes on Friday, the biggest fall since 10 March. Most of the outflows were reported from warehouses in Asia. Net outflows for the week totalled 10,925 tonnes as of last week compared to the inflows of 10,825 tonnes a week earlier. Meanwhile, exchange inventories declined for the fifth straight session, falling by 6,625 tonnes to 532,725 tonnes at the end of last week.
Data from the Shanghai Futures Exchange (ShFE) shows that weekly exchange inventories for aluminium declined by 18,170 tonnes to 293,291 tonnes as of Friday. This was the first weekly decline in stocks since December. Among other metals, copper stocks fell 11.6% WoW to 161,152 tonnes, whilst lead inventories fell 25% WoW to 37,537 tonnes.
The latest reports suggest that operations at the Las Bambas copper mine in Peru are back to normal, as MMG Ltd. confirmed over the weekend that ‘the mining processing and transport of concentrate is back to full capacity’ following the end of roadblocks by community protestors.
Chinese refined nickel net imports have slumped to near a record low after domestic producers ramped up production levels. Data from Chinese Customs shows that net imports of refined nickel fell 85% MoM (lowest since October 2019) in February. The latest forecast from Mysteel shows that domestic refined nickel output may rise 39% YoY to 245.9kt in 2023 as smelters process Indonesian intermediate products and recycled material.
The LME will resume Asian trading hours for its nickel contract from today. The LME will be hoping that this leads to a boost in volumes and helps to improve liquidity. Asian trading hours for the LME nickel contract were suspended last year following the significant short squeeze seen in the market in March last year.
|