Home / Europe / Sanctions on Russia aluminum could hurt global supply chains: Analysts

Sanctions on Russia aluminum could hurt global supply chains: Analysts


The entire commodities market is waiting for Chinese demand to recover, says analyst

Aluminum is the latest casualty of global economic headwinds as prices sink amid alleged dumping of Russian aluminum, weakening global demand and soaring operational costs.

Earlier this week, stocks of aluminum in the London Metals Exchange (LME) warehouses leapt, sparking concerns of potential dumping of Russian-origin aluminum.

The White House is already considering a ban on aluminum imports from Russian producer Rusal.

Unsold metal tends to end up in the LME warehousing system, which are warehouses authorized by the exchange to store LME-registered metal. 

“It’s been very disappointing for the poor aluminum market to see kind of a double whammy from weakening global demand, in China in particular, but also Russia dumping aluminum on the global market,” Wolfe Research mining and metal analyst Timna Tanners told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Asia” on Thursday. 

“So definitely this quarter reflected those challenges.”

Dim outlook for aluminum

The next quarter doesn’t bode well either — unless there is some action to stop the potential dumping of Russia-origin metal and lift Chinese demand, both in infrastructure development and property construction, Tanners added. 

So far, there is little sign Chinese demand could improve quickly given that President Xi Jinping has signaled at the Communist party meeting in Beijing that China will be sticking to its Covid-zero policies, she added. 

This is exacerbated by softening demand elsewhere as interest rates rise, Tanners said.

Aluminum is the latest casualty of global economic headwinds as prices sink amid alleged dumping of Russian aluminum, weakening demand across the world including China and soaring operational costs.

Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Rising stockpiles a bad sign

While the LME does not publish where aluminum is sourced when inventories rise, a rise in global stockpiles is a bad sign given that base metal prices have already been hit by recessionary concerns, said Vivek Dhar, CBA mining and energy commodities analyst.

Any influx of Russian aluminum into LME warehouses also pose a more complex problem, Dhar said in a note.  

“The LME price could trade at a discount to fundamentals if the exchange becomes a dumping ground for Russian metal,” he said, adding that Russia accounts for about 17% of the world’s aluminum production. 

“The LME is acutely aware of the problem.” 

Analyst discusses aluminum producer Alcoa's third quarter earnings

About admin

Check Also

Ericsson up 9% on AT&T network deal as Nokia plunges to three-year low

Ericsson recently announced it is planning to cut 8,500 jobs as part of its cost-cutting …