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Rusal says new Western sanctions will not harm its aluminium supply

Russian aluminium giant Rusal said on Monday that brand-new sanctions on Russian metals presented by the United States and Britain will have no impact on its capability to provide aluminium to world markets.

Washington and London on Friday prohibited metal-trading exchanges from accepting brand-new aluminium, copper and nickel produced by Russia and disallowed the import of the metals into the United States and Britain.

The London Metal Exchange (LME) on Saturday prohibited from its system Russian metal produced on or after April 13 to comply with new sanctions. The Kremlin on Monday said it thought about the sanctions unlawful and a double-edged sword that would hurt the interests of those enforcing them.

The action is aimed at interrupting Russian export income in reaction to what Moscow calls a special military operation in Ukraine. Russia is a major producer of aluminium, copper and nickel.

The revealed actions have no influence on Rusal's ability to supply because Rusal's international logistic shipment solutions, access to banking system, overall production and quality systems are not affected, stated Rusal, the world's biggest aluminium manufacturer outside China with an international share of 5.5%.

The U.S. determination does not enforce any new prohibitions or requirements relating to the processing, cleaning or sending of payments by any intermediary banks.

Rusal and Russian mining giant Norilsk Nickel, the world's biggest palladium manufacturer and a significant manufacturer of state-of-the-art nickel, have not been straight targeted with Western sanctions over the dispute in Ukraine.

The share of readily available aluminium stocks of Russian origin in warehouses authorized by the LME stood at 91% in March, while the percentage of copper stocks was at 62%. Russian nickel in LME warehouses totaled up to 36% of the overall.

Aluminium and nickel futures rallied to multi-month highs throughout early trading on Monday, though both contracts pared gains subsequently.

NO IMMEDIATE SUPPLY SHOCK

Russia's product exporters have actually dramatically expanded supplies to markets like China and India as Western nations have enforced sanctions which President Vladimir Putin says total up to a statement of financial war by the West.

Goldman Sachs said it did not expect an immediate supply shock.

From a basic point of view, it is important to acknowledge that these exchange focused rule adjustments will not generate a necessary supply-demand shock, Goldman Sachs analysts stated in a note.

Russian producers can continue to sell metal to other non-U.S. or UK markets, Goldman Sachs said, however uncertainty remains as to whether other crucial ex-China markets and customers will likewise continue to consume the very same volumes of Russian metal.

Rusal said the LME actions seemed strictly associated to the exchange and derivatives. The company stated it would still be able to offer hedging services to consumers and stayed dedicated to market-based rates.

Nornickel has actually not yet talked about the sanctions.

Rusal shares were 1.7% lower in Moscow since 0918 GMT. Promsvyazbank analysts stated the market was most likely still making sense of the sanctions and their impact.

Although both Nornickel and Rusal sell the majority of their metals under bilateral agreements, their deliveries are likely to decline and, probably, a brand-new discount to exchange prices will emerge, Promsvyazbank analysts said.

(source: Reuters)