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Sources: Rio Tinto increases Q2 Japan Aluminium Premium Offer

Rio Tinto increased its offer of a?aluminum premium to?Japanese customers to $350 per ton for April-June primary shipments. This is up 79% compared to the current quarter.

The revised offer, which is 40% more than Rio's prior proposal of $250, would, if accepted by the client, be the highest premium since the April-June 2015 quarter, when it reached $380 per ton.

Japan is the largest?Asian metal importer and the premiums it agrees to pay each quarter for primary metal shipments over the London Metal Exchange cash price are the benchmarks for the region. Global?producers in late February offered Japanese buyers premiums ranging from $220 to $250 per ton of metal for the April-June period, up 13%-28% on the current quarter. They pulled the offer or let it expire as they assessed the risks of the Middle East conflict on cargoes that transit the Strait of Hormuz. One source involved directly in the quarterly talks stated that the reason for the higher offer was the stronger European and U.S. Premiums, as well as the rising freight and insurance cost. Due to the sensitive nature of the issue, the sources refused to give their names. Rio Tinto refused to comment.

The Middle East war, which is responsible for 9% of the global aluminum?supply has shook the light metal market, effectively freezing shipments through the Strait. The Qatari smelter Qatalum has begun shutting down its production, and Aluminium -Bahrain which operates one of the largest smelters in the world, declared force majeure.

In 2025, Japan will import about 20% of its primary aluminium ingots. Since the end of February, premiums for aluminium have increased dramatically in South Korea.

Japan's quarterly price negotiations began last March and are expected continue until late March. (Reporting from Yuka Obayashi, in Tokyo; Additional reporting from Melanie Burton in Melbourne. Editing by Christian Schmollinger, Saad Sayeed and Saad Schmollinger)

(source: Reuters)