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Aluminium, nickel jump on United States and UK sanctions on Russian metals

Aluminium and nickel futures jumped to multimonth highs on Monday following fresh sanctions by the U.S. and UK targeting Russian metals.

Russia is a significant producer of aluminium and nickel. It also produces copper and some other metals.

Three-month aluminium on the London Metal Exchange leapt 5.2% to $2,624 per metric heap by 0148 GMT, the highest because June 2022.

The LME nickel contract advanced 3.4% to $18,400 per load, the greatest because September 2023.

On Friday, Washington and London restricted metal-trading exchanges from accepting new aluminum, copper and nickel produced by Russia and disallowed the import of the metals into the U.S. and Britain.

The sanctions intend to limit incomes for Russia from the export of metal produced by companies such as Rusal and Nornickel that help to fund its military operations in Ukraine.

On the Shanghai Futures Exchange (SHFE), the most-traded June aluminium agreement increased 1.4% to a two-year peak of 20,865 yuan ($ 2,883.06) per lot, while nickel was up 1.5% at 139,380 yuan.

LME copper included 0.3% to $9,486.50 per ton, tin acquired 0.8% to $32,615 a lot, while zinc moved 0.8% to $2,806, lead lost 0.5% at $2,165.

SHFE tin increased 1.6% to 253,010 yuan a lot, zinc held consistent at to 22,840 yuan, lead edged up 0.3% at 16,735 yuan, and tin was up 1.6% at 252,940 yuan.

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(source: Reuters)