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Sources: Japan's Q4 aluminium price is $86 per ton, a 20% drop from Q3.

Sources: Japan's Q4 aluminium price is $86 per ton, a 20% drop from Q3.

Five sources involved directly in the price negotiations said that the premium for aluminium shipments for Japanese buyers from October to December has been set at $86 per ton. This is down 20% on the previous quarter due to weak demand.

This is a lower figure than the $108 paid per ton in the quarter July-September and marks the third consecutive decline.

Japan is the largest Asian importer for premiums and light metals For primary metal shipments, it agrees to each quarter pay over the London Metal Exchange cash price that is the benchmark for the area.

Early in September, pricing talks were held between Japanese aluminium purchasers and global producers like Rio Tinto and South32. They were to be concluded by the end the month. They lasted longer than normal as both sides tried to close the gap.

The producers initially offered premiums between $98 and $103 per ton, down from the previous quarter by 5% to 9%.

A producer cut its price to $97 but buyers wanted levels in the 80s citing premiums of $70s.

A source from a Japanese fabricator revealed that producers eventually agreed to $86 this past week and that buyers accepted it, despite their bids remaining in the low-$80s.

The source added that high inventories kept prices in the 80s.

Three major Japanese ports have large stocks of aluminium According to Marubeni, the trading house, the total volume of coal sold in September was 341,300 tonnes, an increase of 1.8% over the previous month.

A producer source stated that "we cut offers to reflect the slow demand and to meet buyers' voice," noting that sellers had held out until last week for higher prices, as it was expected that rising premiums in Europe and the United States would tighten supply in Asia.

Sources declined to identify themselves due to the sensitive nature of the issue. (Reporting and editing by Christian Schmollinger, Louise Heavens and Yuka Obayashi)

(source: Reuters)